On the 27th of May 2010 I was invited to attend the Thinking Digital conference in Gateshead, for those who don’t know the North at all and still think it runs on whippets and sheep, here is a map.
Thinking Digital is basically the Geordie equivalent of the TED conferences, in that TED is a non-profit collection of events that promote Ideas Worth Spreading. Thinking Digital or TDC is an annual conference where some of the worlds brightest and most inventive thinkers across the area of digital, attend to demonstrate and highlight their latest technologies and ideas.
The conference is an inspirational blend of new tech, social media innovation and business inventions, and it is a great place to make new contacts and new friends. Unless you are me and then you tend to stand in a corner and wish you were home hidden behind your machine blogging or digging.
The whole event was organised by Codeworks a not-for-profit organisation that has been promoting digital innovation in the North East of England for the last 8 years, they work closely with a major investor One NorthEast and are there to help develop and support new and existing digital media technology in the North East.
The conference director was Herb Kim who I had met when we both gave talks to local company delegates some two weeks before, Herb is the CEO of Codeworks and has worked in the field of media and tech for the past 17 years, originally heralding from Brooklyn with honors from Princeton, Herb’s resume reads like a dream from BOL.com and O2 to Marketing manager st IBM.
I entered the Sage building at around 8.15am, the building is awesome like a gigantic metal beetle lazing on the side of the tyne. Its concaved roof glinting in the unusually bright May morning for the Northeast.
I took my seat in the main hall sometime around 8.30am and as i watch the Twitter stream roll up in the background, Lauren Laverne stepped on to the stage and introduced Paul Miller from Gavurin. Gavrin’s mission is to turn the raw data that is mostly meaningless into an understandable, usable format.

The companies technology called G-View allows companies to find patterns and trends that are normally hidden in data, thus allowing them to use this data to make effective decisions. The technology seamlessly works through the data, integrating the numerical data with charts and maps to create easy to understand visuals.
You can watch a demonstration of this technology below, just click on the images.
Managing large datasets
Making Numbers Easy
Creating great looking graphs
Performance reporting in 11 seconds
You can watch the rest of the video on http://www.gavurin.com/whats_on/#one
Herb then came onstage to introduce one the the best videos of this year so far Embrace Life – always wear your seat belt campaign, probably one of the most underated commercials of this year.
Lauren Laverne then walked onto the stage and joked that the video had brought the mood down saying “well that was feel good” – everyone laughed
We than had a very interesting, but a little overmyhead talk by the brilliant Professor Gilbert Cockton of Northumbria University’s internationally renowned School of Design.
The same school that gave the world Jonathan Ive the genius behind Apple’s award winning designs, and now the Senior Vice-President of Industrial Design at Apple.
He talked about his work in accessibility in the web and his work with people with trauma brain injuries, using social networks to provide better care for people with disablity and also spoke about the 4 types of principles about design. I won’t go into this as i will make a rather large fool of myself, but thanks for the Professor.
We then heard fom Mary Ann de Lares Norris General Manager of Oblong industries in Europe, basically Oblong create the kind of technology that we were in awe of in the 2002 sci fi film Minority Report, and in fact the director of Oblong was the science advisor on Minority report. This science in the film is from his life’s work in which he hoped to emancipate the pixel from the screen into the user actual environment.
In the film the glove-controlled, wall-sized computer display that Tom Cruise controls by hand gestures is the one thing that has stuck in peoples minds.
What Oblong want to do is to tap into the part of the human brain that covers spatial calculations about the persons environment, something that is very natural to use and that remains untapped, they wish to do this be completely altering the way that we interface with our computers. This kind of technology should be a long way to being common place, but is looking like it will be with us within the next 5 years.
Now if you think that this is futuristic, G-speak see the future of this technology being the installation of high-resolution projectors in every light bulb, this would mean every surface in our houses or offices could be an interface. It is their idea to make computers work for us and help them compliment our environments instead of us having to mould to this technology.
The platform, which runs on Linux and OS X, is currently in use at Fortune 50 companies, government agencies, the defense market, the oil and gas markets and universities.
I will be writing more about the TDC10 over the next post.
As most people are aware, the ipad came out in the UK on Friday and so 1,000′s of excited Brits have flogged to Apple stores and various retailers around our green isle, in order to buy the lastest piece of ikit.
Therefore due to this and the prompt of one of my friends purchasing the 64GB wifi ipad, i thought that a test of it’s capabilities was highly overdue.
I have had my niggling doubts about Apple’s latest designer product ever since Mr Jobs began to talk of it, and sent ripples through the social communities. I found the wave of hate of the name, lack of flash, no multi tasking and it’s wireless capabilities only drove my interest deeper … either in a concerted effort to prove them wrong or whole heartedly agree with them.
In this video we unbox the new Apple ipad – specs 64GB wifi (not 3G), it’s raw unedited so don’t expect any fancy intro music or logos plastered all over it.
This video covers how to set-up your new ipad, the crazy thing is that since the ipad is simply a larger version of the ipod, you still need to sync it with itunes before you can do anything. So in that respect it is not really a replacement for your PC or notebook, but lets carry on.
Here we are looking at the quality of sound on the ipad but testing it out on a range of music, from classical and pop to acoustic.
Now we are looking at reading on the ipad, using the app that the ipad it’self recommends ‘ibooks’. This is something that I was personally pretty impressed with, the design of the application and functionality is superb.
In this one we look at the quality of the ipad’s backlit screen for reading, as this is something that the Kindle lacks.
Since the ipad that we have is not 3G we thought that we would check out the wifi and see just how well it works.
This is a test of the quality of itunes movies on the ipad vs the iphone, taking into account the size, we are looking at image quality, speed and Robert Downey Jr.
This is probably the most important test, can we get porn on an ipad… “can we get it and will it PLAY?”
Well i hope that you have enjoyed a little glimpse at the new ipad and it’s functions and enjoyed our company for a few minutes, it was lovely to see you and we will be testing out a few more things on the ipad, so you really must call again.
If you do have any requests for us to try out, drop us a line (the more bizarre the better)
Wallpapers are a sacred thing, you can tell alot about a person by the wallpaper they keep;
So I thought it would be interesting to consider what types of backgrounds a horror icon such as Barker might have, I have mostly chosen Barkers own work, which is as diverse as one of his novels, i hope you enjoy them.
1. Books of Blood
2. The Phantom Hand
3. Infernal Parade
4. History of the Devil – Theatre project
5. Jericho Game
Source:
6. Abarat Artwork
7. Midnight Meat Train
8. Night Breed (Kabal)
9. Jericho Game
10. Clive Barker Artwork
11. Jericho Game
12. Philip Lemarchand (creator of the Hellraiser box)
13. Hellraiser Cenobites
14. The Midnight Meat Train
15.
Despite only lukewarm reviews in the U.S. (criticism mainly centers around the fact that iPad lacks a scanner and its features can be found piecemeal in other tech), the iPad has moved over a million units since its stateside release in early April, leading to a delay in its international release.
And the UK is not happy. While most reviewers on the other side of the pond admit to enjoying the full-size screen and the ease of familiar functionality (if you own an iPod or iPhone, you wont have any trouble interacting with Apples new product), they have been fairly critical of the product as a whole.
The hubbub seems to center on the price range, which was suspected to start around £399, but was later revealed to have a starting price point of £429 for the 16GB base model, with prices climbing as high as £699 for the 64GB+3G iteration. That translates to a range of about $620 to $1,000 American, while prices in the U.S. started at $499, or about $550 with tax. In addition, the data package offered in the UK looks to cost about £40 per month for unlimited usage (almost $60 U.S.). And thats not even mentioning the 17.5% VAT (although its rumored that this tax has been included in the listed price). Ouch! No wonder theyre upset. And although Steve Jobs has commented that this is the price of bringing American business to the UK (shipping and storage), reviewers chalk it up to a simple matter of supply and demand theyre charging more because they can. Public commentary on the topic tends to promote the opinion that for the same amount of money, one could buy a laptop and an iPhone and have all the functionality and then some.
Other gripes include the lack of a front-facing camera, which many suspect will be available on the next version of the iPad, and limited usage (one app at a time). Most reviewers are recommending that buyers wait for the second round of sales to take advantage of add-ons that are not available on the current model. This could mean serious trouble for international sales of the iPad, except for one things an Apple product, which almost guarantees it will sell out (despite delays and rumors of add-ons). Regardless of forewarning from the press, iPad is expected to do just as well overseas as it has in the U.S. Its the latest golden Apple and everybody wants a bite.
The iPad is set to ship in the UK on May 28th for those who pre-ordered (after a two-month delay) and will reportedly be available to everyone else on June 7th. It will also be available in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and Switzerland on the same date.
Guest Post by – Sarah Davis is a content writer for DiscountVouchers.org (Currys discount codes) and aside from her passion for writing she loves a great discount and is an avid bargain shopper
Facebook icons are pretty dull and i don’t know about you, but I always struggle when looking for them for my any social media blogs or networks. I usually have to hit the streets searching for a hit of something naughty… just to get me through the painful proceedure of having to endure such vapid designs for so long it would make the very angels weep blood.
So this time, i took a late high tea, some nice brown bread cucumber sandwiches and a vegan fairy cake to me dirty little den in the basement, and I began another grand quest …………….
“to find a slightly cooler looking Facebook icon that the typical basic blue ones, or those part of a cute collection with Twitter, Flickr and RSS ones that are out there!” and ok.. it was hard as designers just don’t seam to be that bothered with making cool ones, but i hope you (as the groovy social media incrowd) like what i found.
Since this story crashed my server and upset a few other companies on it, i thought it might be nice to do a little follow-up post using some of the comments and ideas i was given via Twitter on DM and on the blog. Now most of you were pretty ok with this, which although nice also left me wondering a few things;
1) You RT’d it because someone else did but did not read it
2) You hate your boss and wanted to annoy him
3) You really want things to change
(ps: those peeps i asked to RT the story are exempt from the choices above, as i annoy you enough)
Not everyone liked the article, infact Paul fabretti from letsgabba.com thought it was “utter tosh list of incorrect rubbish” as did Steve Downs from Juicedigital.co.uk who left me a comment. PS steve, that site of yours needs some SEO, check those URLS (talk to @jaamit, he will sort you out).
This was in response to Mr Fabretti who had added a comment explaining why “it was utter tosh in 3 reasons”
Now, i did answer them back on the blog, but i do think that this is something that could do with a discussion.. even if we end up running around in circles. At the moment, social media has no real standard, it is a free for all.. and this is cool exceptwhen it comes for it being commercialised.. this is when the issues start.
So with no further ado .. Let the battle commence
So i am collecting a bunch of responses from people within the industry which.. should be interesting at the very least (stay tuned..)
ok Paul..
1) Yes Yes Yes .. brands should run their own social network updates… YES!!! and if that means that you miss out on £700 a day for tweeting about something you don’t know about YES. I know it sounds crazy but if you are running the accounts under their brand name, it is not social media (social media is about conversations with the individual) NOT an agency.
2) So your way of billing for social media works for you, great. So within the montly allotted time you get to – build solid relationships with a chosen network, train your client up to be savvy on said network, report all stats to do with a campaign, run all blogging outreach, update any internal resources supporting the campaign every few hours, run all of your community mapping and make sure that your are telling your client to target the correct platforms and influencers, build a solid community around a clients blog, twitter, facebook or other networks, run smaller promotions like competitions etc.. (so your clients on are on a retainer of £30,000 a month?)
3) If you had read it, i said it can work if done right…. my experience is that it weakens the links of communication understanding and puts up more barriers.. for someone like Vodafone, perhaps…but an SME?
I do follow all of your points, but it is all coming from a ‘money’ angle not a social media angle
1. I still disagree with this, although to a lesser extent than other points. As I mentioned, the client will always be best-placed to handle this kind of activity. TWhilst the agency may have an innate understanding of the business (a depth of understanding that allows them to speak on their behalf through press releases), the client will always know more about the business and the people within.
But if, as you say, this post is about your experience with small SME’s is the business owner likely to take on social media on with everything else going on? Many small businesses struggle with seeing how PR fits into the mix, let alone giving it the time to do its work.
The point about not knowing anything about a client’ business is an irrelevant one. Whether it is social media, pr, advertising, whatever, any firm that embarks on anything without at first getting to know the clients business wants binning straight away.
Further, to suggest that £700 (or whatever) a day for tweeting something you don’t know about is to undermine the value that many agencies bring – namely that Twitter might not be appropriate, and secondly, no activity whatsoever should be undertaken until it has been proven what channels and topics are relevant.
2) As far as the billing goes, yes, it works very well for us. Maybe that is why we work with the clients we do. Short-term, frequently updated retainers ensure that we have a degree of security (financially), but that the needs of the client can change according to how well/popular the activity is going. If things are working well, the client knows that we need to spend more time on the activity (to derive the maximum value for both client and their customer). If, as we do in many cases, try and bring the client in to take over our activities, the short-term retainer ensure that they have and will not be paying form something they are dong themselves.
As for the retained actions per month, this is carefully costed according to what we believe the content plan is/would/could be (but amendable if necessary). Whichever way you look at the retainer (its value or the tasks involved in delivering it), there simply has to be some commercial restraints that are based on what and when actions need delivering. As nice and social media-y as it would be to be able to spend 24/7 on customer engagement/community management, understanding the time and posting behaviours of a client’;s customer means that you can always deliver when it is relevant. Your client’s customers are night owls? Let the account teams come in later to stay later.
It is a retainer, not a restrainer, with the customer and their interactions at the heart of it.
3. I am sure there as many multi-agency horror stories as there are good ones, but I agree, the more there are the more problems they cause.
At the same time, part of the problem is that everyone thinks they own a bit of social media and is therefore trying to twist things to suit their own capabilities – which inevitably means that the most important person, the client and their customer get forgotten about.
As per your tweet, i am glad you posted what you did. You are totally right, at least it is giving a chance for people to have their say, whatever they think!
OK Claire – here you go:
1. Disagree. As long as you’re transparent about it. And anyway, isn’t that always the case? If you’re a marketing executive called Michelle working for Pepsi and tweeting as Pepsi not Michelle because you’re being paid to do so – what’s the difference? Why should I, as a long-standing marketing partner to Pepsi, be in any worse a position to represent the company than Michelle?
2. Really don’t care. If you’re working for someone you should get paid for it. Hourly, daily, weekly, monthly who cares? The real debate should be about the validity of being paid for results – which leads you on to monitoring and evaluation of social media campaigns and what ‘results’ actually means. I could go on all night, but it’s Bayern v Man U tonight.
3. You having a laugh? Turkeys and Christmas come to mind. But really, why not? My view is it’s like building a house. The architect has a job and so has the builder. A good architect will consult a builder as he/she’s putting together the plans and the builder will continually check with the architect as he goes along. A client marketing dept is like the architect creating a brand marketing strategy and the social media agency the builder turning the strategy into reality. The client can get good advice on strategy from the agency and vice versa. Better stop that analogy there before I start describing Twitter as cement or some such bollocks.
So there you go. Thanks for the advice on the website Claire, but as social media gurus we really don’t need SEO…
1. Agree. I think if you are ever “found out” it will dent the brands image. People are not naive enough to believe that a brand will “Tweet” or “FaceBook” the absolute truth – They assume “spin”, or at least they should, but think if you are setting yourself up as Brand X, then it should be somebody in Brand X’s organisation taking responsibility for the responses, and more importantly pro-actively building relationships on-line. To not have that seemingly brand-to-consumer direct link seems to sour the relationship?
2. Not sure about this one? When I worked in an agency we billed for a certain level of work per month, i.e. 5 x Press Releases, 2 x Feature Articles etc etc. and charged a retainer for that. At the end of the year when we presented our activities back to the client, and tried to justify through overperformance why they should accept a huge hike in the retainer. I don’t see why Social Media couldn’t be part of that mix, but I’d be uncomfortable going for a “Pay-per-Tweet”, or “Pay-per-Friend” model and as in my answer to 1 above, I’m un comfortable with an agnecy running it.
3. Disagree. I think that if you’re going to do “social media” you should do it well, and a third party agency should assist in designing and guiding your strategy. That way you’ll avoid the “schoolboy errors”. However, as in my answer to 1 they shouldn’t be running it on a day-to-day basis.
1) Agree but to a point.
You can’t run anything without the clients buy in and approval. Product launches, events and yes… social networks. Often you’ll find that clients either don’t have the time or resource to invest in building up a social media presence which is why they bring in an agency or consultancy to help with the process. In my opinion there is nothing wrong with this but where it breaks down is if the client has washes its hands of the process entirely. And this is what separates an agency (yes sir/ma’am, we’ll take the £700 a month a tweet for you) from a consultancy (before we take your £700 a month, who are we trying to influence and why, what’s our end goal and do you realise you’ll have to spend xx hours a week even if even you don’t know what a tweet is).
Social media gurus get the reputation they deserve because often they can’t see or advise on the business objectives of the client and explain how having a million followers on twitter will help them achieve them.
2) Disagree but again to a point (I know how Vince ‘I sit on the fence’ Cable feels like now)
There is nothing wrong in billing for social media activity within a monthly retainer as long as it fits with a wider PR/marketing campaign. Personally I just don’t think social media for business works if it’s done in isolation to the other disciplines. Again it comes down to carefully explaining to clients what they’ll get for their monthly retainer so they feel they are getting value for money. Clients are happy to pay PR agencies monthly retainers to draft and distribute press releases to journalists, build and foster relationships and expect a set number of cuttings/interviews. Is is too far a stretch to think they will/should pay some more to do the same for a twitter or Facebook audience?
3) Ok I have to disagree with this one (although you do quantify that it’s not on all occasions)
The best agencies know where their expertise starts and, more importantly, ends. Bringing a third party to within some capacity is not necessarily a bad thing if handled right. But as you say, if you allow a third party to ‘ruin’ your client’s campaign and the relationship with your client then perhaps PR/social media consultancy isn’t for you. At the risk of sounding like a broken record, any agency in charge of running a social media campaign for a client should have the experience of the business and strength of character to know what’s right and wrong for the campaign.
Love the post. It’s great to read something is honest and provokes a reaction rather than the thousands of article that pretty much recycle the same old stuff.
Hi Claire, I’ve enjoyed reading the opinions from you and your social media guru friends
I completely agree with your argument to be honest, but for what it’s worth, here’s my perspective…
1. Completely agree. That’s surely the whole point in social media?! As we do social media training this risks sounding promotion-ey, but I think the market for Digital Agencies is going to shift towards Social Media Training (or, the role that Digital Agencies play is going to shift).
There is no one better than the person who knows and loves their product to be writing about it and talking to others about it. People just need to be shown how to start using social media in a business-savvy way.
2. This is admittedly a trickier question, but I do agree. Of course the agency and client should negotiate whatever suits them best. But to have a fixed monthly retainer as standard runs the risk of insinuating that social media is something that can be finished. In fact, I wrote a guest blog on this yesterday, saying that the first step to running a successful social media campaign is to ditch the very notion of a campaign (the word implies a finish line, not to mention military/political aggression!).
This reminds me of those black-hat SEOs who approach businesses and make wild claims to get them to the top of Google in a month. Or SEO Agency clients who want X traffic by X date. Whether they succeed or not, if it’s not sustainable then it’s a load of rubbish!
3. I don’t want to absolutely agree with this… As some people obviously have no idea about how to use Social Media effectively! As I said, the place of Digital Agency work is going to change – their role needs to more about educating a client in how to continue engaging with social media. So, pay for help if you need it. But ask the agency how what they’ve done can be sustained and learn from what they’ve done rather than see it as a campaign.
1. Agree, but this isn’t all or nothing, the agency needs to be fully involved beginning with training the client, developing this understanding in practical terms by walking them through real-life processes and remaining involved to highlight issues/discussions/opportunities for the client to get involved in the conversation. If and when the agency needs to get involved this should be made clear either in the biography for the profile, confirming the responses are developed by the marketing team and who this includes, or with a direct sign off on the post/comment.
I agree with some of the other comments, specifically that in some cases clients just want you to take this part of the campaign away from them and deal with it, buying social media in the way that they think a commodity can be purchased – ‘just get me some of that social media’. In these cases it’s necessary to step up the education process, show the client exactly what can happen and run them through actual scenarios and consequences to bring the importance of their external communications home to them. Often this barrier is just a lack of understanding, but i admit this isn’t possible in all cases. At that point it comes down to the agency-client relationship, and whether a compromise can be found adhering to the issues of transparency/knowledge/etc.
2. I think this question very much depends on the circumstances, and the client sector. If you are saying social media shouldn’t be billed on a set monthly retainer that doesn’t evolve in-line with the requirements, then yes i agree; i don’t think it’s relevant to charge a set fee of £x amount per month to cover all elements. However, if you’re saying billing should only be done by action, that in-turn creates a whole new admin nightmare of agreeing set fee levels for potential activity and it pushes us further towards the hourly rate that a solicitor might take, which again is not where we need to be.
This is far from a simple issue, and many agencies have taken the easy route of cramming social media services into existing billing structures, which usually involves monthly retainers, and changing the way services are delivered around the billing structure rather than the other way around, which isn’t right either.
The obvious exception comes with a project where objectives are set, metrics agreed and timelines roughly in place, which is increasingly popular. In terms of ongoing campaigns, i think a lower set fee to cover ongoing service, monitoring, management etc is acceptable, and the project approach can be taken to deliver more encompassing activity.
3. Disagree, but again, it depends on the issues. As i said at the beginning we are primarily a communications agency. We listen, engage on key issues, build conversation, develop useful content…you get the picture. We have a decent technical understanding and have in-house technical team members but this isn’t our strength and it isn’t what we want to do. We work with trusted partners, and have done for many years, to deliver successful campaigns.
I think the big issue is trying to complete the social media circle in a single agency, encompassing research, strategy, build, engagement and measurement, which usually results in problems as the agency’s skill set usually falls in one or maybe two areas, meaning two pieces are done very well and the rest just fumbles along.
We also might work with a brand’s traditional PR agency, marketing agency, search agency, digital agency, etc, etc. We may not know them, and sometimes we think they don’t know what they are doing in terms of social media, but again it depends on the relationship with the client, and of course you have to stand by your beliefs, even if that means warning the client and walking away.
I was on the search for an interesting twitter icon for a clients blog, and after coming across a couple that made me smile, i thought that i would blog my findings just incase anyone else shared my icon taste i.e: not cutesy enough to make you want to choke on your own vomit.

Now this is not a subject i would have taken on a few years ago, although after coming across numerous pitfalls during my time working in social media, i have come to a number of conclusions.
a) Marketing and digital marketing are quite different, marketing people aren’t naturally technical
b) Digital marketing people aren’t naturally creative
c) Social media sits on the fence of these two skills and so the confusion has always been how each side adopts it
d) The shit storm commences …..
This will normally happen if you have a client who is not sure about social media and well, just wants to try it out for as little money as possible. This type of approach might have worked for big brands, but it’s mostly smoke and mirrors, if it’s a clients account then someone who works for the client and who can answer company questions directly should be maintaining it.
Don’t - Because it’s tedious, it’s wrong and it does not work
Do - Set-up a twitter account or Facebook account and get all the aspects of any syndication sorted, give the client an understanding of pace and tone, but that is where the relationship must end. You can after a few months give them extra pointers and of course get involved in competitions and promotions via the accounts.
Yes i mean it, agencies cannot run social media accounts for clients on a monthly retainer … why? because the very essence of social media is undermined by the very nature of this way of working. This approach gets so messy with clients paying for 2 days a month and then the social media department having to either struggle to get work done within that time, or having to frontload time for one month and being left with no time for the next two months to monitor the campaigns affects.. so let’s move on!!
Don’t – Think that social media will work within your current billing system of SEO and development
Do – Consider social media as a flexible service and invest in a new billing alternative
When a 3rd party agency who have no real experience with social media other than “talking allot about Facebook applications” get’s involved, RUN… and I’m not exaggerating. You don’t want to be any where near that campaign when the shit (that you said you smelt in the beginning) hits the proverbial fan.
Don’t – Let the 3rd party convince the client that their vision is best until you are 100% that it is
Do – Have a meeting at the very start of the relationship to make sure you have all your skill sets defined before progressing any further. A bad idea is always a bad idea no matter how much you try and dress it up!
OK…. lemme just say this once, If SEO and social media tried to get fruity with each other … it would be alot of dry humping but with no real satisfaction on either side. They are not the same species… don’t confuse them.
Don’t - Call an SM an SEO, it’s upsetting to SEO’s who might thing social media is wanky old bollocks and social media people who think SEO’s are just spammy link heads
Do -Unlearn what you have learned and think of social media as PR and creative marketing
Most experts are well connected, after all if they aren’t, they are simply glorified link builders. But if those connections aren’t maintained or misused… then those connections will start to see you (the social media person ) as less of a friend and more of a spammer. A social media person or department needs time and a whole heap of it to maintain these relationships and build more. It is the old moral tale of links vs relationships.
Don’t – Make the mistake of asking the social media department to spam their contacts
Do – Give the new department time to develop new relationships and networks
A social media department or person, needs time… it is the most precious thing you can give them, and by time i don’t just mean the odd Friday afternoon or 1.34 to 2.15 on every second Tuesday in a month with an E in it. I mean 3 solid weeks back to back to build up a niche network, develop some awesome link bait or an entire two days out videoing content in the local town centre… TIME my friends is the life blood of social media.. it will die without it.
Don’t – Give the social media department strict deadlines as you would give then SEO team
Do – Give the social media department the time to do a better job even if half this time is not billed to the client
This is again down to timing and this happens all over, if a company is promoting a product they should be an example of that product. I can understand with SEO it is a matter of battling against some pretty competitive keywords, but with social media we are merely talking about ‘doing it’ and adopting the principles of it, from making videos of colleagues talking about themselves to giving staff enough time to promote the business.
Don’t – talk about how wonderful social media is until your company is also adopting it in-house
Do – Give your staff the opportunity to express themselves and help build your brand via social networks
The only difference between the way a social media campaign is run and a PR campaign using social networks is run, is that the PR company can afford champange and oysters and the social media guys get a packed of hula hoops and a topic.
Don’t -Sell a service to the technical director of a company and then wonder why we cannot push on creative ventures
Do - Promote the service to the head of marketing
“Yes Mr client, you are absolutely right that using 3 days to find influential people who could market your business for you and help build your brand is ridiculous, lets start off with an hour a month and see where that takes us” ……….. (nowhere is the easy answer)
Don’t – Back down under pressure from a client who does not understand and limit social media campaigns possible impact
Do – Enforce the social message and make sure that you are talking to the right people
The statistical side of social has been raised as the holy grail time and time again, but to be honest it’s not all that difficult. You simply find your goals and try to reach them… there are 100+ of free tools out there to help and yes they take time to plan and get right, but they work and they work well.
Don’t – Expect miracles within the first few months in the stats and expect it to work like SEO reporting
Do – Make time in a budget for a social media department to collate this data, take time to understand the processes and view the data in a more creative way
Well, if i haven’t lost you by now.. thanks for reading and i would love some feedback of what you would like digital agencies to consider… you don’t have to give your name so you won’t get into trouble x
Bye folks
