Early this year, Burger King made waves with a "Whopper Sacrifice"
Facebook app. Google, meanwhile, has achieved Twitter omnipresence
with 87 official accounts. But not every company has tons of free
hamburgers and/or employees lying around, so a like-named session at
SES Chicago addressed the matter of "Social Media for the Little Guy."
Jennifer Evans Laycock, Search Engine Guide's
editor-in-chief, started the session by expressing a dislike for the
phrase "social media marketing." She prefers to think of it as a
dating experience - "social media dating for small business marketers,"
if you will - and went on to explain why.
Laycock believes there are seven common rules. First, people must
listen. They must learn to be romantic (using what already exists for
their own benefit), and not expect sex on the first date (think
patience and persistence). It's also important to be yourself (look at
how Blendtec embraced its identity), to make yourself available, to
seek out the right match, and to value long-term relationships.
Jessica Kornacki, the vice president of marketing for Endless Vacation Rentals by Wyndham Worldwide,
spoke next. She talked about brand awareness. One good example of
drumming it up involved YourFatChance.com and asking people to share
stories involving bad luck. Their stories were used to show that
everyone needs a vacation.
Then Eric Brown, founder of Urbane Apartments,
made his presentation. Brown stressed, "You can participate in the
conversation, but you can't control it." You may not even want to.
After turning his blog over to the community, Brown saw site traffic go
up 108 percent and actual rentals increase by 69 percent.
Finally, Brett Tabke, the CEO of WebmasterWorld.com,
shared some thoughts (and numbers). Tabke revealed that he spent
absolutely nothing on marketing and ads for PubCon 2009, instead going
all-Twitter-all-the-time. Things went up 30 percent in a down year as
a result, leading him to observe, "Retweet is a marketing arm."
Tabke also said, "Afternoons are disproportionately retweet heavy . . . time of day is everything." And Tabke recommended Klout for Twitter analytics.
Doug Caverly & WebProNews Reporter/Anchor Abby Johnson contributed to this report.





