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Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Jun 22nd
Affordable social media monitoring just got a whole lot more powerful with the launch of Trackur 3.OMG. Clever name, right? We know, but at least this time there’s something worth SMB owners getting excited about.
If you’re not already familiar with Trackur, you may want to read our 2009 interview with Trackur founder Andy Beal. What Trackur does is offer powerful social media monitoring metrics without a heavy price tag. Trackur keeps it simple and instead of reporting on EVERYTHING and going crazy with bells and whistles, they focus on what businesses actually want to track. The result is metrics anyone can benefit from at a price that won’t hurt your business.

But none of that is new.
What is new is that yesterday Trackur announced its new 3.OMG update which completes the social media pie by adding an analytics component called Trackur Insights. With Trackur Insights, small business owners will be able to see:
And they’ll get it all in an easy-to-understand dashboard.

What struck me about the features list of Trackur Insight is how it really hones in on the information that
will most serve small business owners, without too much fluff. For example, I’m always encouraging small business owners to pay attention to not only the number of mentions they’re receiving but WHERE those mentions are coming from. Taking a look at where people are talking about you is really valuable in helping SMBs find new satellite communities to become part of or for identifying new blogs and forums that should be on their radar.
Similarly, looking at Velocity Changes can help you resolve potential online reputation management issues before they blow up in the search results by making you immediately aware of increased conversations brewing. This is the stuff that really matters in social media monitoring and Trackur delivers it directly to you.
As a small business owner, I can’t stress enough how important it is for you and your business to develop a presence in social media. And part of establishing that presence means monitoring it – both to find new opportunities and for quick problem resolution. Trackur is a cost-effective way to help you manage both.
Worth noting is that even though Trackur has just added Trackur Insight to its plans, they have NOT increased their prices. Anyone with a Plus, Premium or Ultimate Plan can take advantage of the newly-added analytics. The Basic place doesn’t include analytics because, according to Trackur, there’s not enough information to pull from. However, at $88, the Plus Plan + Analytics is a pretty good price point for most SMBs.
Trackur Adds Analytics To Social Monitoring
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Jun 10th
Monitoring Relationship Status
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
Growing a business these days is really about managing relationships.
Business owners must learn to manage and juggle a complex and shifting combination of customer, partner, vendor, staff and advisory relationships in order to survive and grow.
One of the greatest challenges in doing so is monitoring the current status of all of these important relationships.
Some companies take a stab at this with the traditional customer satisfaction surveys, but these tools typically have more to do with research than current relationship status.
I believe businesses need to find ways to gauge the real time status of how they are doing in the minds of their most important constituent groups and do so in a way that is dead simple, but still elicits an honest and constructive measure of relationship status.
I’ve started to employ a one question survey tool that only asks the recipient to do one thing – click on one of four responses and that’s it. The survey goes out by email and I can tailor the question and response to a handful of situations and monitor feedback in real time.
Obviously, you can’t build relationships through an online form, but you can monitor relationship status in a way that demonstrates you care and are listening and you stand a far greater chance of repairing a damaged relationship when you make it easy and appropriate for someone to tell you that something’s wrong.
Here are some of the ways I employ this tool:
Customer happiness – The most obvious use of course is to get a quick response to work you’ve done or a product you’ve shipped.
Referral generation – By monitoring when a customer tells you they are really, really happy, you can immediately target these customers for referrals, case studies and testimonials.
Go deeper in organization – Many times your work is done only with one person at an organization, but it impacts many others. Using a simple tool you can gauge the overall value your work has to the organization and help that “buyer” build a case for keeping you around.
Partner monitoring – Anytime you receive a referral from a strategic partner you can create a tool that makes sure you are performing on the referral in ways that are making them look good. This is so critical if you plan to build a strategic partner platform.
Internal customer – How often do you take the internal temperature? How happy is your staff? It may be one of the most important reflections of the service your customers receive. How about monitoring the relationship between internal teams like sales and marketing?
Event follow-up – A quick way to monitor how your webinar, conference or presentation went.
The tool I currently use for everything described above is called Customer Thermometer. I like it because it makes it very easy to create simple, recipient friendly and fun one question relationship monitoring email surveys and monitor feedback in real time.
Of course you could easily use a tool like Survey Monkey to do the same thing, but Customer Thermometer does this one thing very well in my opinion and is easy to get going.
I did get a free month as an incentive to try the service out, but I also arranged a deal where my readers can get 2 for 1 for their first month by using the code ducttape. (Just so we’re clear, I don’t receive anything for promoting this tool, I just think it’s the right one for this use.)
View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing
Oct 12th
| Social media monitoring tools provide a ton of data that you can use for brand management, generating leads, business development,… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Sep 3rd
| SingTel, in partnership with local startup JamiQ, is bringing a stripped-down version of the latter’s flagship social media monitoring… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Aug 22nd
One of the best ways we have to intuit the way others decide is to understand how we decide. We have a voice in our heads and we assume others do too. We don’t like rancid cheese and we assume others don’t either.
I’ve met two kinds of successful intuitive marketers. The first kind has absolutely no ability to describe why people do what they do. They just know. I talked with a famous fashion designer for two hours and came away believing that she has no idea whatsoever how or why purchasing decisions are made. She has no words for it.
The other kind is an honest witness of the decision-making that goes on every day inside. “Why did I just choose that?” “Why do I believe this? Is it because of something my dad said when I was three?” “Why did I give $100 to that charity? Why not zero? A thousand?” This self-insight is difficult and valuable. It means that you can’t take things at face value, even things that you might be more comfortable leaving unexamined, as truths. Theologians wrestle with this dilemma all the time. How can you study an idea or a trend or a belief system if you also accept it as a universal, unquestionable fact?
And so the smart marketer throws away bias and stops cheering for one outcome over another and instead quietly takes notes on herself. Notes start shallow, but if you push, you can get deeper, stripping away layers of previously unexamined instinct. You can test those notes, see if they occur in other people when you vary the inputs. And it’s this series of notes and tests that give you insight on how to share your next idea.
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View full post on Seth’s Blog
Aug 20th
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For a long time, social monitoring has been about tracking keywords. But recent advances have sparked an arms race in two fields: cluster analysis and… |
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Aug 15th
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From an agency perspective, many utilize social media monitoring at the request of a client who either doesn’t know much about it, or depends on their agency to… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Aug 2nd
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Social media is relationship and conversation media. At its core is the art of building relationships with others, human-to-human. However, you… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Jul 31st
| This gives you a great way to measure the impact of your marketing efforts and social media campaigns, especially when combined with sentiment. |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Jul 29th
| @etrevallion social media monitoring @mollermarketing monitoring would be the one i choose over those two options @schachin monitoring…… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!