Higgins’ idea is passe

Mayoral candidate Barb Higgins needs to update her ideas about Calgary’s multicultural communities because, unfortunately,…
First shared by votecalgary
on SERVICE_TWITTER
votecalgary
Last shared: Thu Sep 30 16:13:14 GMT 2010
2 Total Shares: 2 Tweets

View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!

Will EverCookie kill the affiliate market?

Do you know what an “EverCookie” is? If you are in the affiliate market, as affiliate or merchant or network, you should really know about EverCookie!…
First shared by sphinn
on SERVICE_TWITTER
sphinn
Last shared: Thu Sep 30 16:17:30 GMT 2010
10 Total Shares: 10 Tweets

View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!

New Justin Harrison Announces Virtual Internet Mentorship

Internet marketing expert, Justin Harrison has launched a virtual internet mentorship program that will allow website owners to…
First shared by nobuddy
on SERVICE_TWITTER
nobuddy
Last shared: Thu Sep 30 16:18:01 GMT 2010
114 Total Shares: 114 Tweets

View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!

Book Review: The Political Brain by Drew Westen

Why write about politics on an entrepreneurial blog?  If you’ve read my reviews long enough, you’ll know that I like to occasionally venture beyond business books for fresh insights. I’ve also written about how political campaigns are entrepreneurial, while the actual role of being a legislator is managerial. Hence you can learn a lot from campaigns. Still, I wasn’t going to review this until I read Seth Godin’s blog post last week which accurately summed up The Political Brain: The Role of Emotion in Deciding the Fate of the Nation by Drew Westen.

From Seth’s blog:

The market is not seduced by logic.  People are moved by stories and drama and hints and clues and discovery.

Logic is a battering ram, one that might work if your case is overwhelming. Walmart won by logic (cheap!), but you probably won’t.

Seth nailed it. Consumers do not care about logic; they want stories and emotion.  And so it goes with voters and constituents.

Note that while the book criticizes Democrats, it’s written with a liberal bent. Westen makes no apologies for this as he walks through the mistakes made by Democrats in recent years. Yet, if you step back and take out the politics, these are mistakes made by entrepreneurs all the time.

1.  Trying to sell your product based on facts and figures, not feelings.  Westen uses the Gore vs. Bush debate about Medicare to demonstrate this mistake at work. Gore relied on facts and figures, and Bush won the exchange by dismissing the “fuzzy math.” Sure, VCs want facts and figures, but consumers? Not so much.

2.  Selling your product based on arguments for why people should buy, not by eliciting the right feelings in consumers. People buy based on emotions, not on who has the best arguments for why someone should buy the product. The example here was again from a Gore vs. Bush debate where Bush attacks Gore’s character. Rather than respond to the allegations and insinuations, Gore tries to refocus on issues. This didn’t go over well.

3.  Assuming that the same campaign strategy will work for all demographics. What ignites emotions in some regions, i.e. New York and California, may be entirely different from what connects emotionally in the deep South. The same is true of a product. After its anti-woman ad on the Superbowl, it was clear that Bridgestone tires was not interested in selling tires to women. I hope they would have a totally separate ad campaign to run during Dancing with the Stars.

4.  Ignoring core values and responding to what the people say they want. One of the problems Westen points to as a downfall of Democratic candidates is that they make decisions based on polling results. Heck, if Steve Jobs ever polled people, do you think they would’ve said … yes, we want this thing called an iPad?

5.  Not telling a story. Whether it’s on the campaign trail or in promoting a product or service, the one with the best story wins emotionally.  

For political junkies, this book is truly fascinating. Unfortunately, it ends before the Obama campaign. Yet one can see exactly what he did during his campaign to overcome many of the obstacles his predecessors struggled with. For me, however, the highlight of the book was the reprinting of some of the great political speeches, slogans and ads, from Lincoln to Roosevelt to the present.

Since it’s election season, The Political Brain is a fun read that just might spark some ideas for entrepreneurs.

View full post on Entrepreneur.com – Daily Dose

Publications 37% Say Marketers Play Role In Childhood Obesity 10/01/2010

Further, asked how much responsibility they think corporations, through their product marketing, have for childhood obesity,…
First shared by MediaPost
on SERVICE_TWITTER
MediaPost
Last shared: Thu Sep 30 16:19:25 GMT 2010
9 Total Shares: 9 Tweets

View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!

Shutterfly Names Tony Pecora Vice President of Customer Marketing

He manages marketing channels that include internet marketing, CRM, and e-commerce. With more than 20 years of experience in business, marketing and…
First shared by alysyncurd
on SERVICE_TWITTER
alysyncurd
Last shared: Thu Sep 30 16:20:28 GMT 2010
103 Total Shares: 103 Tweets

View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!

Mattel’s Fisher Price Recalls 10 Million Toys

Fisher Price is recalling more than 10 million toys for creating a choking or injury hazard. Here’s the list, from the CPSC:

Fisher Price Trikes and Tough Trikes toddler tricycles

About 7 Million of these are being recalled in the US after 10 reports of children falling “against or on the protruding disc-shaped and D-shaped pretend key.” Translation: The trikes could injure your children in the crotch.

Little People Wheelies Stand ‘n Play Rampway
Fisher Price is recalling 100,000 of these because “the wheels on the purple and the green cars can come off, posing a choking hazard to young children.”

Healthy Care, Easy Clean and Close to Me High Chairs
950,000 of these are being recalled in the US because the pegs on the high chair’s back legs have hurt children who fell on or against them.

Infant Toys with Inflatable Balls

Fisher Prices is recalling 2.8 million of the following products: Baby Playzone Crawl & Cruise Playground, Baby Playzone Crawl & Slide Arcade, Baby Gymtastics Play Wall, Ocean Wonders Kick & Crawl Aquarium (C3068 and H8094), 1-2-3 Tetherball, Bat & Score Goal. “The valve of the inflatable ball on these toys can come off and pose a choking hazard to young children,” according to the CPSC.

For more information, call the CPSC Hotline at (800) 638-2772, or check their website.


View full post on Business Pundit

Trends That Will Shape Small Business Next Year


Trends That Will Shape Small Business Next Year

This content from: Duct Tape Marketing

2011 trendsLast year about this time I wrote a post from OPENForum titled 5 Trends That Will Shape Small Business in 2010 – I’m thinking I pretty much nailed them, which on the surface might seem easy because small business are often late to jump on trends. The tricky thing about understanding small business though is that when they do jump on a trend it’s often in ways that run counter to what the mainstream media reports.

Small business don’t care about a trend so they can get out in front of something, they care about things that seems obvious, practical and worth the scant bit of time they might be able to allocate to it. If you’re trying to sell to or understand small business, take a look a look at this year’s 5 Trends That Will Shape Small Business in 2011.

Here’s a quick look at what they are, but you’ll have to go read the entire piece to get the full view from a small business vantage.
1) Social simply is
2) Mobile finally lands
3) O2O becomes strategy
4) Networked referral automation
5) Apps over Web

Like this post? Share it with others

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
del.icio.us
Sphinn
Google Bookmarks
StumbleUpon
Digg

View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing

Why The Social Web Is Like Falling in Love

“I don’t have enough time!”

Those five words are uttered over and over by small business owners, entrepreneurs (and, believe it or not, big, scary brands) when it comes to maximizing this new world of online marketing and brand building.

Variations include:

“I don’t have time to create really interesting content.”

“I don’t have time to visit blogs and forums and become a part of the conversation.”

“I don’t have time to reply to my followers on Twitter.”

What is interesting about this complaint is the word time used to be replaced by “money.”

Pre-social Web days? Buy some ads. It took money, but far less time. Hire some awesome creatives and watch the magic happen. However, this was never really a (good) option for small business owners.

The problem is many businesses have taken this “pre-social Web” approach to the social Web–and it just doesn’t work. What I mean is hiring an agency to tweet on your behalf or come up with “campaigns” (some agencies are doing it right and spending their effort advising clients, as opposed to doing it for them).

There is no beating around the digital bush. If you want to build a brand online (or bring a brand online) for the long run, it takes a lot of time, effort, drive, creativity, passion and patience (along with personality and caring).

Here is the good news, though: The social Web offers a huge advantage for hustling entrepreneurs as opposed to big brands. Everyone has a shot at building a community and/or becoming a trusted resource online….as well as having a thriving business (what could be better?)

The social Web is similar to the dating world. I’m sure you have heard stories (or experienced them yourself) of the guy (or girl) who casually dates but tells their date that right now they “don’t have time for a relationship.” When probed, it is easy to come up with excuses:

“I’m really focused on my business.”

“I travel a lot.”

“I like to spend my time naked watching Pokemon.” (awkward)

But suddenly, this person meets the right guy or girl and is head over heels in love! Suddenly, he or she does have time for a relationship and is married a year or two later.

Whoa! Where did that time come from? Did it just magically appear out of nowhere?

Or maybe it’s this simple:

We make time for things we care about.

We make time for things that are valuable.

We make time for things when we want to make time for them.

My suggestion?

Simple: Make the time. View brand building in the social Web era as a long-term relationship. You have to put the effort in, knowing that the fruits of your labor are down the line (not today, not tomorrow, but later).

Take the time to strike up new relationships.

Take the time to create interesting content, whether it be text, video or audio (or a combo!)

Take the time to interact and make small talk with people.

Take the time to answer your e-mail.

Take the time to reply to your messages.

Once you start seeing the value of the social Web, it will be hard to remember where all that time was going in the first place.

From Small Business Trends

Why The Social Web Is Like Falling in Love

View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends

2010 TAM AWARDS!

2010 TAM AWARDS! The Net Impact Web Design and Internet Marketing Team won six awards at the 2010 TAM Award Show!
First shared by thenetimpact
on SERVICE_TWITTER
thenetimpact
Last shared: Thu Sep 30 16:25:28 GMT 2010
6 Total Shares: 6 Tweets

View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!