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Oct 13th
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Sep 22nd
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Sep 7th
25 Long Lost, Extremely Rare Books And Articles Written By Wallace D. Wattles, Author Of The Science Of Getting Rich!
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Aug 21st
Why are we surprised that governments and organizations are lining up to control ideas and the way they spread?
When power resided in property, governments and corporations became focused on the ownership, regulation and control of property.
When power shifted to machines and interstate commerce, no surprise, the attention shifted as well.
Now, we see that the predictions have come true, and it’s ideas and connections and permission and data that truly matter.
So gifted inventors shift gears and become patent trolls, suing instead of merely creating. So government agencies rush to turn off cell phone towers. So corporations work to extend and reinvent the very notion of copyright protection.
Here’s what we ought to demand:
Are copyright rules being played with as a way to encourage creation of art (which was the original intent) or are they now a tool for maximizing corporate profit?
Are patents (particularly software patents) being used to encourage new inventions, or have they turned into a tax that all of us have to pay whenever we use a computer or a phone? (Hint: if you can draw your patent on an index card, it’s an idea, not a patentable process worthy of protection).
Is disconnecting a cell phone or a social network any different from trashing a printing press?
When organizations seek to control widgets and hammers and land, it seems right–that property is clearly private, and sharing it doesn’t scale. When two people both try to eat a marshmallow, there’s less for both.
Controlling ideas and connections and data… that’s a fundamentally different deal, partly because it’s so personal (that idea in your head might or might not have been inspired by the idea I wrote down, but it feels wrong for me to tell you that you can’t have your idea) and partly because in fact, shared ideas do scale, they don’t usually diminish.
Ideas are going to continue to become more valuable, which means that the urge to control and patrol them is going to get greater.
View full post on Seth’s Blog
Aug 4th
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Jul 13th
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May 11th
The Single Most Powerful Use of Social Media for Small Business
This content from: Duct Tape Marketing
I get asked all of the time for tips on simple ways to use social media in a small business that don’t require vast amounts of time.
I mean, small business owners know they need to get more involved online, they hear about and see it on TV daily, they are using more and more in their everyday lives, but when it comes to their own small business, it’s still taking a bit of a back seat because they fear they don’t have the time to do what looks and feels like a bunch of work for little immediate gain.
So, before I ever send an apprehensive business owner off to chase Twitter and Facebook followings I always start them with one simple tactic aimed at three very important groups.
So, here’s my advice: If you’re looking for the single most powerful use of social media in your business follow this simple plan.
My tactic of choice is one of the easiest to employ, automate and orchestrate and it has noting to do with tweeting. It’s simply the act of plugging in and listening to what people that are important or potentially important to your business are doing and saying in all of the social networks they participate in. Understand though that I’m talking about very focused listening here, that’s why this is a high payoff activity.
That’s right, you can derive immense benefit through social media tools without actually doing much more than listening. The first tool of choice is Google Alerts because you can set up countless alerts and receive daily email digests for all. Of course you’ll want to add another free tool such as Social Mention because it will help you pick up things that Google Alerts misses. I simply put my Google Alerts into Google Reader so I read them when I want and I bookmark all my searches in Social Mention and add a Listening Folder to my Bookmark toolbar so I can refresh the results anytime I like. (You can also step up to some paid versions like Trackur and Social Report)
Of course the next step is to determine who and what you’re listening for. Of course you’ll want to set up alerts and bookmarks for your own brand, that’s just common sense, but there are three other groups that I suggest every small business start tuning in to.
1) Clients - create alerts for all of your important clients and even go as far as adding their blogs to your RSS Reader, creating a Twitter List and adding it to a tool like TweetDeck and exploring if your CRM tool allows you to add the social connections for your clients (BatchBook, Highrise or ACT! all have this function). Monitoring what your clients and prospects are doing and saying in social networks will allow you to anticipate and serve their needs and build relationships much faster. A funny thing happens when you start to view your clients as real people!
2) Key Journalists – Almost every journalist is using social media these day and that includes this new breed of journalist we call bloggers. When you can locate the key journalists and bloggers in your industry or community, and you start to tune in as detailed above, you can find ways to engage them and build relationships by simply participating in their conversations with tools that didn’t exist just a few years ago.
3) Strategic Partners – I write about the notion of creating a team of best of class partners to bring to your clients frequently and one of the best ways to recruit and activate a strategic network is through the use of the systematic listening I’ve described here. This is a great way for you to learn what your partners need, how you can refer business to them and how you could create an entire content portal around all of the information and education your partners are putting out daily.
Of course listening is simply the starting point. But, by using a systematic approach to listening and focusing that approach on the highest payoff audiences, you can now engage those you are following and know that your time is well spent. It may be fun having a debate with a random stranger on Twitter, it just might not be a wise use of your time.
However, when you track your clients you might just learn that your largest client has a new grandson or just watched their oldest receive a diploma – these life moments are excellent opportunities for you to come to know more about the real stories that make up your business.
When you read an article by one of your key journalists written about a topic you just happen to have a great deal of research on you can immediately jump in and comment or engage in ways that make you a valuable resource. Or, you can comment thoughtfully on a blog post of one of your key bloggers and start to build a conversation relationship that could eventually turn into a guest post opportunity.
When one of your strategic partners mentions they are looking for a programmer with API experience, and you know a wiz in that specialty, you can quickly step in and refer a solution – that’s the number one practice in generating your own referrals by the way.
So you see, if you’re one of those still confused about how to make social media pay or where to start to get your social media marketing going, look no further than your ears.
I talked about this very subject briefly in a video interview with Bryon Elliot on a visit to Orange County.
View full post on Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing
Apr 21st
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Mar 22nd
Search? Social? There’s so much involved in each, as a small business owner, which one should you put the bulk of your focus on? Well, you may not like the answer. According to new research from GroupMSeach and comScore, search and social are a bit like peanut butter and jelly – you simply can’t have one without the other.
Last week eMarketer revealed it’s search and social together that really aids online shoppers, citing data that found clickthrough rates increased by 94 percent when a consumer was exposed to both brand-specific search results and social media. That’s a stat worth knowing. Whether you are an SMB leaning more toward search or a business owner leaning more toward social, the graph below offers a pretty compelling reason why you should invest in both.

Interestingly, when it comes to social media we’re not necessarily talking about Twitter or Facebook. We’re talking about niche industry sites and blogs and, increasingly, review sites. Turns out these are the primary social avenues that most affect consumer buying decisions, with 30 percent of respondents saying they relied on reviews to aid in their purchase decisions. Twitter and Facebook may lead in awareness, but it’s review sites that are a customer’s last stop before checkout.
And that makes sense. Consumers are using search to identify brands and then turning to review sites and peer recommendations as a way of “quality checking” them. As an example of this, Yelp’s Dylan Swift recently noted that sites like Groupon have significantly increased the traffic coming into Yelp. Why? Because when consumers are exposed to a company they are unfamiliar with, before they purchase the deal, the go to Yelp in order to check the company out and hear about other users’ experiences. I thought that showed a really interesting pattern of behavior – citing both the importance of online reviews and making sure that you’re protecting your Google 10 should a new customer go looking for intel on your brand.
The lesson here for small business owners is that it all matters and users are using more and more sources to find local information and content. To grow a successful Web presence you must:
Invest in search: The appearance of social media has not diminished the importance of local search engine optimization. You still need to claim your listings, master your site-specific keywords, localize your content, care about Google Place Pages, and take care of all the other local search engine optimization best practices.
Invest in social: Create those corroborating factors for users to stumble upon–because after they come across your brand website, they’re going to head to the people they see as “experts” to get their take on you. They’re going to read about you on industry blogs, they’re going to read your reviews, they’re going to check out your entire social presence. It’s not enough to just appear in search. You need to back up that presence with social signals.
Overall, I thought eMarketer presented some really interesting data on customers’ searching behavior and how they’re using the Web to locate vendors. It’s not a one or the other game. In order to attract customers, you have to develop a presence in both search and social.
Search and Social Pack Powerful Consumer Punch
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends