Synchronicity and Social Media

On December 29, 2009, in Creativity, Doing the Greater Good, Featured, by Nettie Hartsock

I’m a giant reader of Jung and one of the things I’ve been studying is his insight on synchronicity. I also had the opportunity to read “There Are No Accidents: Synchronicity and the Stories of Our Lives” by Robert Hopcke. I cannot recommend this book highly enough. (Not a client book!)

In his book, Hopcke (a therapist) says people ask him, “How do you work with synchronicity?” and he answers, “Be open to the meaning in what you did not want to happen.”

How does this apply to social media? I think it does beautifully because if there is one thing I know about social media it is that you never know what might happen and you can not underestimate the power of being online and finding new synchronistic communities and readers.

I might say, “”Be open to the meaning in what you do not yet know will happen in social media.”  Stop being afraid of what might or might not happen and just start conversing online.

If you come from a place of reticence, fear and “i’m not enough-ness” online then synchronicity will be hard fought. If you choose to be open to all that CAN and will surely happen if you are participating on the Web, then BELIEVE me you will be constantly amazed at how the Web really works to connect people to their tribe.

It’s not about marketing your ideas, it’s about empowering your community and finding synchronicity between them and you and what can be done to change the world.

It’s not about celebrity. It’s about celebrating how uniquely gifted all of us are and how we can lift up one another.

It’s not about bait and switch and selling something you know is not the real deal. It’s about waking up and typing your heart out because you know in doing that you are doing good.

Every single person on the Web counts toward something greater and at the end of the day, why not be counted?

You matter to the Web. I hope to see you there in the new year.

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Merry XMAS

On December 24, 2009, in Uncategorized, by Nettie Hartsock

misfit toys

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1. Social media is all about quantity not quality.

2. Social media happens overnight and you just need a couple clever tweets to get the masses.

3. There are gurus (like Social Media Santa) that really exist and we need to be like lemmings and just do everything they say.

4. If I only post on my blog at least once a month, I know that my Google page rank will get to #10 effortlessly.

5. There is only one way to Oprah and it is only through a PR or marketing guru who wants me to listen to a ton of webinars and give them money to do so.

6. Social media can make me a celebrity – because it’s all about being a celebrity. (Hint: It’s not.)

7. I don’t have to generate useful content for my community. I only need to generate bait and switch content to get them in the door and make them buy something.

8. Social media is easy. (Hint: it’s not.)

9. Social media can cure every possible marketing pain I have.

10. Just using social media is enough, I don’t have to do any offline marketing or any other outreach.

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Twas The Night Before Social Media…

On December 18, 2009, in Featured, by Nettie Hartsock

Twas the Night Before Social Media….

Twas the night before social media, when all through the Web

Not a Facebooker was statusing, no new updates in sight.

The tweets all tweeted on the Twitter with care,

In hopes that St. Click soon would be there.

 The 24/7 social media gurus nestled all snug in their beds,

While visions of new DIGGs danced through their heads.

And Mamma-Web in her Bing-chief and I, computer in lap.

Had just settled down for a long tweet free nightcap.

When out on the Web there arose such a clatter,

I sprang from my Lazy Boy, to see what was the Web-chatter.

So close to the screen, I stuck like a flash.

Logged into my blog account and posted a blog post fast..

With a little old blog post, so lively and quick.

I knew in a moment it was definitely St. Click.

More rapid than BING, his Google-bots came,

And he whistled, and shouted and called them by name.

Now HubSpot, Now Mashable, Now Kayser, Now Guy!

On BING, on DIGG, on Alltop and FiledBy, oh my!

To the top of the search! To the top of the LinkedIn!

Now blog away! Blog away! Blog away all!

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Going from Naked Stick Figure to Fabulous

On December 16, 2009, in Blogroll, Blogs, Featured, web 2.0, by Nettie Hartsock

Which came first the website or the blog?

While it’s important to have some sort of presence on the Web, the times they are a changin, for what drives search engine mojo.

Did you know you can have a blog self-hosted on your domain that can give you the very added bonus of driving natural search engine traffic each time you post new content.

 Yes, I’ve definitely partaken of the blog Kool-aid!

 Here is a new way to look at what your site is creating for you.

Search engines love updated CONTENT and lots of it. Content is what colors the stick figure of your website and keeps the search engines coming back for more.

Think of it in terms of what search engines see. A stick figure website with no blog, no keywords, no tags, no new content, no feeds. (See Option 1 below)

Option #1 your website without a blog:

stickfigure 

 

 

 

Option #2 – your website with a blog:

businesss woman 

 

 

I think I would pick Option #2.

While you don’t have to have your entire website built on a WordPress platform – you can at least add a blog to the website so that each time you’re posting your brilliance the web crawlers are coming back to the site!

Using tags and categories for your blog posts also help you grow your search engine visibility as does linking to outside blogs! (Authentically!)

 Even if you decide to stay stick figure and not have a blog, you should still help your site along by:

 1. Submit to the ADD URL form through Google – http://www.google.com/addurl.html .

 2. Submit your site to (MSN) LIVE -

http://search.msn.com/docs/submit.aspx

 3. Submit your site to Yahoo – https://siteexplorer.search.yahoo.com/submit  

 Now go out there and attract those web crawlers!!

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How Not To Promote Your Book: Drive-By Blog Comments

On December 15, 2009, in Bad PR, Blogs, Books, Featured, by Nettie Hartsock

Because I come from an Internet journalist background, I felt compelled to post this comment below that I received on the post I did “I’m not Your Social Media Expert, and That Should Make You Happy” .

I very rarely do not approve a comment to my blog because it’s very important to keep the communication gates open both ways and we’re all here to learn together. With that in mind, please take this lesson to heart. It is not good marketing to post a short blurb about your book in someone’s comment section of their blog. I know there are some book “marketers” and book “social media experts” who for years have touted this as a good idea. Heck, they’ve even published this suggestion in some of their own books!

However, this is never a good idea. Ever, ever, ever.

Think of it like this. What if you decided, in an effort to get more buzz out about your book, that the best possible thing you could do is spray paint the front of someone’s home with your book title and short description?

This would actually make the homeowner feel great rancor toward you and the neighborhood (her community) wouldn’t much cotten to seeing this either. They trust the homeowner to keep her home spiffy, smart and valuable!

A blog is someone’s home. People come to it and the blog author opens his/her doors to a knowledge base that will hopefully be very educational and actionable. And FREE of marketing blather including in the comment section.

With that in mind, here is the aforementioned comment I received (I’ve edited it a bit so not to expose the commenter, so anywhere you see BOLD I’ve changed it from what it actually was.)

“Shoved to the curb and left to fend on her own at the age of 14; AUTHOR NAME eventually went on to receive a Bachelor’s Degree in Social Work.

But God was not welcome nor allowed to be spoken on the job… Not able to do so, AUTHOR NAME went on to work for the Archdiocese of St. Paul/ Minneapolis for 8 years.

NAME OF BOOK is a true story of AUTHOR NAME strength & perseverance. That, combined with her strong faith is what makes this story unique and a must read!

This is AUTHOR NAME first book and is currently working on her sequel… NAME OF NEW SEQUEL.”

So here’s the thing, this comment not only violates the good mojo in terms of respecting one’s home blog turf, but also it shows these three things:

1. The author has not ever read the blog she just posted a comment to.

2. The author did not actually read the blog post she posted the comment to.

3. The author is unaware of how one should post comments to a blog.

Lessons Learned:

1. Read the blog you’re going to post a comment to.

2. If you want your book reviewed or want to drive traffic to your book site – research the sites that talk about books, book reviewing and reach out to those blog editors in person through an email pitch, not through an email pitch.

Here are some good ones to check out -

a. BergersBookReviews.com – Alice Berger’s fantastic site.

b. Bookpleasures.com - Norm Goldman’s superb site. Note, on Norm’s link that he has a quick review service, but also offers a free review service.

*I posted the two examples above without the direct contact information (emails etc.)  because I’m mean and I don’t want to share. Ok…that’s not really true. I posted them like that so you could learn how easy it is to use this little free tool called the Internet, hit those sites and get the contact information on how to pitch them books very easily from their site!

To sum up: Be your own best advocate, keep pitching and swerving and building strong lists for your book, and don’t listen to everything social media book gurus advise you to do.

And in the words of one of my favorite Monty Python songs, “Always look on the bright side of life, always look on the bright side of life.” How does that apply to marketing your book? There are thousands of blogs you can find to feature your book if you’ll just stay positive, focused and in it for the long haul.

Now go and get your book out there!

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New BEA Head Sought

On December 9, 2009, in Book Expo, Books, Featured, by Nettie Hartsock

I love this headline. It just came across in the PW e-newsletter as their subject line and for a moment I had the vision of Lance having lost his actual head!

Turns out Lance got promoted and BookExpoAmerica is on the hunt for a new director. He has in my estimation done a stellar job with BEA. He is the most approachable person and is always up and positive at BEA. I hope they find someone to fill his shoes that has the same enthusiasm and love for books!

TODAY’S NEWS

Fensterman Promoted, Search on For Successor
“Lance Fensterman has been promoted to group v-p of Reed Exhibitions and will devote his time exclusively to running the company’s pop culture business. He will retain oversight of BookExpo America until a replacement is found. A spokesperson said Reed expects to have a successor in place before the 2010 convention set for New York City. Fensterman. who joined Reed in April, 2006, will now manage New York Comic Con, Chicago Comic and Entertainment Expo as well as a number of other shows. ”

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I’m constantly marveling at people who grab catchy domain names with the word expert in them to establish their expertise. For myself, I’ve always shied away from referring to myself as an expert in anything. (Well, almost anything. I think I’m a pretty expert Mom.)

Having been on the Web since 1996, I’ll give you some historical perspective about those early folks making their way along the DotCom highway touting themselves as “experts.” Wait, I was going to use links to their sites to show you how far they’ve come and how many people they helped, but alas, all their sites are long gone.

Here’s the deal about social media and it’s very similar to the early days of the dotcom frenzy. The more you learn, the more you need to learn. Having been a technology journalist from the infancy of the Web, I can promise you that each time you think you’ve got it all figured out is just about the time you need to learn a new tool’s update or test out one more beta site.

I don’t know about you but when I see the word “expert” it’s usually a red flag for me to make certain to look at the offerings in-depth.

So here are some ways to determine if the expert or experts are up to snuff:

1. Has their blog or site just been newly created and does it have very little in terms of blogroll, tags, keywords, categories, link love?

2. Are these “experts” regulars on the good ol’ teleseminar rodeo circuit?

3. Does it all seem too good to be true?

4. Do they blog about free tools you can use or more about how to buy their “coaching services?”

5. Is their blog transparent or is it filled with links to affiliated folks and “friends of friends” who also offer you their “insider secrets.”

6. Do they post news articles that underline the need for metrics, measurement and benchmarks in social media?

7. Do they have pictures, bios and client references on their blog or website?

8. When you ask them if they’ve had good success in their campaigns do they respond smirkily “Can monkeys fly?”

Just always keep in mind that social media is ever-evolving and there are lots of people who can help you and lots of free sites including Mashable.com, Problogger.com, DailyBlogTips.com that can empower your own understanding just as much as a social media consultant can.

 

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Mr. Media, Bill Scheft and a publicist’s pain

On December 8, 2009, in Author Interview, Featured, by Nettie Hartsock

I’m generally reticent to comment on my client interviews with online media after they’ve occured, but I felt this one is a great example of how humor, insight and a publicist’s pain work together for the greater good.

One of my favorite clients is Bill Scheft and I think one of the reasons I like Bill is because he constantly makes me laugh. It’s nice to have a client that really understands that life is life and books are just one aspect of life. It’s also pretty darn hilarious when you’re a publicist and you book an interview for your client and the interviewer makes you the butt of a joke during the show.

Oy vey. A publicist’s life. You can’t win. You’ll have to listen to the full interview with Bill and Mr. Media which features some new stories about Larry David and Bill’s career as a writer. If you’ve not read “Everything Hurts” yet, you should.

I also love that Bill, no matter who is interviewing him, ever so patiently finds something funny about folks trying to make him laugh.  And I was doubly impressed by Mr. Media because one could tell that he really worked hard to research Bill’s work and he read Bill’s book. That is not always the case!

Bill is also incredibly patient with me, who is more than often tempted to send  his PR updates in Top Ten list style. (Just to see if he thinks it’s funny.)

If I did send them it would be something like this:

Top Five Bloggers Who Said No To Book Pitch and Why:

1. IloveSarahPalin.com – only reviewing books with “Rogue” in the title

2. Mamma’s Knitting Again.com – “if it doesn’t have knitting needles as a main plot line, we won’t review it.”

3. Republicanswhoright.com – “No thanks. We don’t think humorous novels are funny.”

4. Sportsguyswhoread.com – “Too busy reading “The Cheetah Who Played Golf”

5. ComedyHurts.com – “No, the book doesn’t sound painful enough.”

See, I just did it then, and I couldn’t even think of ten. So it’s good I’m not a comedy writer.

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When I’m speaking to groups I often start out by saying, “Hello, my name is Nettie and I’m a Web dinosaur.” I’ve been on the Web since 1998. Want to see what it was like then? Go to this link.

It’s astounding to me how long the “long tail” has really grown on the Web and what a short amount of time it’s taken to get to where it is now. I was lucky enough as an online journalist to have worked prior to the dotcom burst and after it, and I’ve witnessed astounding changes in that time.

I’m also spending more time thinking about how social media has impacted the Web and what it can and cannot do for you. My focus is how it can help individual platforms. I do think that if you’re not participating on some level using Web 2.0 tools you are missing a conduit for real engagement and outreach.

I also think we should be wise and wary and careful about drinking all the Web 2.0 kool-aid and going full force without really understanding which tools will work best for us.

I came across this recent Business Week article titled, “Beware of Social Media Snake Oil” and I think it makes some very good points. If you read through the whole article, you’ll find a reference to “The Cluetrain Manifesto” which has influenced many Web marketing consultants and is still an extremely valuable book.

With that in mind, I thought I would post this interview I did with David Weinberger, one of the authors of the book. This is the first of a series of interviews I will post occasionally under the Classic Interview headline and most of them were conducted from 2000 to 2002.

The timeframe was one of the most interesting in Web history and marked both the best and the worst of the dotcom frenzy.

2001 – Classic Interview: David Weinberger

by Nettie Hartsock, February 2001 (Ibiz)

Part 1: “The Cluetrain Manifesto” and conversations

Nettie: Do you still play “Quake”?

David: Yes. And as continued practicing improves my skills, the continued aging process removes them.

Nettie: Do you think the presidential websites had an impact on this year’s election and, if so, how?

David: The Republicans were apparently quite successful in raising money on their site. But, at least as important, political websites – like commercial ones – train people to expect to get complete and full information that just a few years ago would have required much more effort. Now, does having more information at your fingertips make you a more informed voter? Judging from the outcome, apparently not.

 Nettie: Tell us how you came to write “The Cluetrain Manifesto” with your other well-known co-authors?

David: The four authors had been talking via email and phone calls about why the media were, in our opinion, so wrong about the Web. We discovered that we agreed with one another in interesting ways, each approaching the issue from a different point of view. So we put up ClueTrain.com hoping to express some of what a lot of people on the Web were feeling.

Nettie: What does it mean that “markets are conversations” and “businesses are conversations”?

David: The old business model says a market is the demographic slices you can reach by broadcasting to it. A market in this view is the lowest common denominator of statistical information. But markets used to be much more than this. They used to be places people went to shop, to talk, to exchange news. And now, thanks to the Web, markets are once again becoming real groups of people with real names and real voices.

We find one another on the Web and talk about the products that matter to us. Likewise, all of the real work of business is accomplished through conversations at meetings, in the hallways, over intranets. Constant talk.

Nettie: Why doesn’t it work on the Web for a business to talk in jingles?

David: Because we’re not sitting there passively, waiting for the next show to come on. We’re not captives.

Nettie: What is the most important issue to consider in marketing to your customers on the Web?

David: Ack. Just one? I’m having trouble deciding among “Tell the truth,” “Let people talk in their own voice,” “Drive out fear,” “You’re not the center of your customers’ universe,” and “Don’t be a jerk.”

Nettie: Why are customers desperate for stories?

David: Because we want to understand, and the richest understanding is through stories. Stories show how events unfold, how the end is contained in the beginning. And stories are always told by a real person in her or his own voice. They’re the opposite of the jingles you just mentioned.

Nettie: How should the conversations that occur between business and customers via e-mail or the customer feedback page be viewed by a company?

David: Customers and their conversations aren’t assets of the company. They’re not owned by the company. But they’re of tremendous value to the company. (These conversations don’t only occur via email or feedback pages.) Customer conversations tell the truth about the company. They’re passionate. And more and more, networked markets know more about the products than the company ever could. So, learning how to participate, as humans, in these conversations is of tremendous importance. The trick is that you have to really do it as a human, and not as a marketing ‘droid dressed up like a human, or like a Marketing Professional out to manipulate the conversation.

Part 2: Stop pretending and talk without fear…

Nettie: Tell us why it’s a good thing that the Web is always going to be “a little broken” as Berners-Lee has said?

David: Because every large structure is. And every human being is. We’re fallible, wee creatures and what we build is always at least a little bit broken. Recognizing and accepting that fallibility is liberating. Yet most companies insist on being “anal-perfective,” pretending that everything they do is perfect.

Nettie: Can “traditional” companies stop pretending and become fearless enough to have “real” conversations with their employees and their customers? Do you think the change will be embraced by the companies ultimately when the bottom line is at stake?

David: Yes and yes. The fact is that businesses are made of people, and people are much more complex than org charts. Without its “social networks,” a business literally can’t move, much less succeed. And you’re right to put this in terms of fear. So much of the structure of business is built around fear of employees and fear of customers.

Nettie: Will universal broadband contribute further to the demand for “real” conversation?

David: We already have “real” conversations every day on the Web, unless by “real” you mean “face-to-face.” I’ve made friends and kept in touch with old friends by email. Those conversations are real. Some people will prefer to use video or voice instead of email, but email will continue to be an important new way people talk with one another. Email is here to stay.

Nettie: What is the role of a CEO or CMO in a hyperlinked organization?

David: To help the company be smart. Companies are smart not because they have lots of data or lots of smart individuals but because they have smart conversations happening all over the place, crossing all the organizational boundaries, including with customers.

Nettie: In three years time, in your opinion,  are companies going to be if they continue to stay in a state of denial about the power of the Internet and the need for “conversations”.

David: If they continue to view the Web as a very slow broadcast medium, they will at best be ignored, and at worst treated with the contempt they’re showing to their customers.

Nettie: Does the book have a large following of established CEO’s who are embracing its ideas?

David: Lots of senior managers, including CEOs of Fortune 100 companies, have read the book, had one or more of the authors in to talk, given out copies of the book to their teams, and so forth. But the book very purposefully stays away from giving lists of things to do or programs that can be “embraced” and that will “work” for a company.

The book says: This is the most exciting and promising time any of us have lived through. Stop reading business books and go out and invent!

 Nettie: Thanks for the conversation, David!

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Checking your Grade on Twitter…

On December 5, 2009, in Featured, Twitter, by Nettie Hartsock

As everyone who reads this blog knows, I’m a giant fan of HubSpot’s free tools like websitegrader.com, pressreleasegrader.com and bloggrader.com .

Guess what?

Just in case you’ve not been monitoring their free tools in the past couple months,  they’ve also powered up Twittergrader.com.

Should you try it out? Of course. Should you use it as another way to give you guidance on how you’re reach is on the Web and how to improve it? Absolutely.

My grade is 99 out of 100. And my ranking is 34,000 among 5 million plus Twitter accounts. Remember marathon, not sprint with all things social media. No matter what your grade is at the onset, you can always improve it.

Does ranking size really matter? Hmm. Good question. No grading system should be the only thing you rely on to determine how your efforts are progressing, however it’s good to have some base measurements and definitely when these tools are free you should take advantage of them.

To spur you on in your own quest to rule the Web, at the very least put a couple of your competitive Twitter folks in the grader too and see what comes up.

I’m also positive that HubSpot will continue adding more features to Twittergrader so once every six months you should replug in your TwitterID and see what comes back gradewise.

Each time you do, I have no doubt you’ll find more actionable data you can use to help your social platform expand.

For more information on how the grader works, I also encourage you to check out HubSpot’s reference for it here.

Now go and grade!

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Stop Whining in the Cactus

On December 4, 2009, in Featured, by Nettie Hartsock

Just to get this out at the onset, I’m not an affiliate of FiledBy.com. However, what they are doing for authors is really superb and again I must say that it is an ideal way at a very good price point (starting at free) to get your visibility empowered on the Web.

There’s been quite a bit back and forth about how FiledBy.com is just creating another place that authors have to update, yada, yada, yada and woe is we authors who shouldn’t have to help with our own marketing.  I have two words to say to that, “Boots on!” which in Texas stands for “Stop whining in the cactus, put your boots on, stop the woeing and start marching to your next big book rodeo!”

Even if you just are going to use the free offerings of FiledBy.com, who would not want to at least do that? Do you want to be on the lone prairie all by your lonesome book self? Or do you want to take advantage of the amazing opportunities in this new publishing rodeo and ride like the wind to your many cheering denizens?

I pick ride like the wind, and I hope that means you will to and at the very least fill out your free profile on FiledBy.com .

Here’s a great example of the homepage today to “spur” you on. It features Seth Godin, John Perkins and a few other authors you just might recognize! If you can’t see it because the image is too small – that’s on purpose – so you’ll have to go to FiledBy.com today and see it there.

FiledBy perkins small

 

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