marzo 18, 2010

10 Essential Social Media Tips for B2B MarketersMashable!

The B2B Marketing series is supported by the MarketingProfs B2B Forum, where you’ll learn the ins-and-outs of social media as part of your overall B2B marketing mix. Register today!

*Additional reporting by Tamar Weinberg

When we write about how companies or individuals are using social media in their marketing strategies, it’s usually in the context of a business to consumer relationship. However, business-to-business (B2B) marketing is really getting a boost from social media as well. According to a recent study, 60% of B2B marketers plan to increase social media marketing spending this year.

As we discussed earlier this week in the context of PR professionals and social media, even non-B2B-centric services like Twitter and Facebook can still offer great opportunities for B2B shops. Sometimes, the approach is the same as it would be in non-B2B marketing, sometimes it can be very different.

Figuring out how to best implement and harness social media in the course of B2B marketing can be difficult but we’ve put together ten tips to help get you on the right track!


1. Use Twitter Effectively


This may seem like a no-brainer, but plenty of businesses and even B2B marketers aren’t on Twitter. Get an account on Twitter and start engaging. While having profiles on other social media platforms like Facebook and LinkedIn can be equally important, Twitter remains one of the best ways to find and engage with others.

How do you do that? Start by searching for phrases relevant to your business and by monitoring those searches regularly. Look at what people are saying and join in the conversation. If people aren’t necessarily looking for your business offerings right away, start joining other conversations of interest. The more you build bridges, the more likely you are to be noticed.

Second, use hashtags. The #B2B hashtag, for example, will connect you with several other like-minded businesses who are also trying to leverage Twitter to build an online presence. Don’t overdo it, though. There are some people #who #tweet #like #this.

We’ll discuss this in the next point, but consider Twitter to be an informal medium. With social media, businesses can (and should) be human again. That’s why it’s safe to use Twitter not just for pure self promotion but to build a meaningful relationships with those who you are likely to do business with you in the future. If you feel comfortable using your business Twitter feed to talk about what makes you tick (versus purely promoting your business), you might be pleasantly surprised to see that your audience might very well be receptive to that messaging.

What’s great about Twitter, especially from a B2B perspective, is that you can follow just about everyone. Take advantage of the opportunity to follow your industry influencers, connect with potential customers, and keep a heads up on the competition.

A great example of Twitter usage from a B2B perspective is @salesforce. Salesforce has used its Twitter feed to share relevant news, to empower current customers, and to offer customer support.


2. Figure Out Your ‘Social Voice’


Social media works best when it is personal and authentic, and thus, it’s important to make sure that the way you communicate when using social media tools comes from a personal and authentic place.

Kevin Dugan, the Director of Social Marketing for Empower MediaMarketing recently wrote a blog post about finding your social voice. I spoke with Dugan about establishing a social voice, and he had this to say:

“It is critical that brands understand a social voice is different from brand voice. Social voice reinforces the brand voice indirectly. Social voice doesn’t follow communication guidelines or identity standards. That’s because a social voice equates to a person. A brand voice is anonymous while a social voice can be found on Google. They must also have an understanding of the brand and a passion for it.”

Social networks are now helping to put the “human” back in businesses again. The traditional messaging of yore has been replaced by businesses who actually appear to show that they care about their customers. With a social voice, informal is perfectly acceptable. Having a social voice, as opposed to just a generic “brand voice,” is an important step when connecting with potential customers. Prospective customers want to connect with businesses who think just like them.

Just because your clients are other businesses doesn’t mean that the “social” aspect of social media needs to disappear.


3. Take Advantage of Opportunities on LinkedIn


LinkedIn is continuing to get bigger and bigger — and it continues to be a great resource for businesses and employees to connect with one another.

One of the best things about LinkedIn is the Shared Connections feature. This feature makes it possible to find people — like potential clients — and then see what connections you have in common. Shared Connections then makes getting a virtual introduction that much easier.

Building up a strong LinkedIn network and being willing to introduce others (in good faith, of course — always use your best judgment) can also increase what opportunities you can get in the future.

B2B marketing is often built through trust and word of mouth. Having a shared connection is a great way to start establishing some of that trust from the very beginning.

LinkedIn also has a community of active participants. LinkedIn Answers serves as a knowledge base where business representatives can establish authority and expertise by participating in the ongoing discussions. LinkedIn Groups is an opportunity for business professionals to interact with other topics relevant to his/her interests. One business successfully used LinkedIn Groups as a way to build business leads. This business opted to engage in relevant industry discussion and offered business services when requests were made, thereby bringing in a highly targeted business lead. Actively participating in LinkedIn is often one of the best ways to not only help people out, but also to make a connection for your service and even generate leads.

Answering questions across LinkedIn Answers and LinkedIn Groups doesn’t mean to simply put out the marketing blurb, but to really engage and offer feedback and solutions. Again, social media is most effective when it is genuine.


4. Start a Blog


Social media provides the opportunity for companies to promote themselves but also to welcome commentary from a community of peers. By starting a blog, you give your readers an opportunity to see you with your social voice outside the typical corporate website’s newsroom. Blogs become platforms where you can announce new product releases, share personal company stories, answer any specific questions from your customers, and empower customers to achieve success with your products and service offerings. Blogging can also establish business professionals as thought leaders in their field, thereby aiding with client acquisition.

Blogs can build up qualified prospects through search engine rankings too. Be sure to update your blog regularly with valuable content and follow up with the comments written on each individual post.


5. Monitor Your Industry


Social media means that content is being posted everywhere, and businesses have a unique opportunity to gather intelligence to make well-educated and informed business decisions. Google Alerts is a great tool to keep up with what’s happening in relation to your company, your industry and your competitors. You can get updates via e-mail or in RSS (and even in real-time) about new search results or news stories for a certain query or topic.

Further, free tools like Social Mention and YackTrack will monitor the social sphere for other mentions of your business on social sites, especially. BackType will take that a step further and monitor phrases in comments on blog posts. All of these aforementioned services can be emailed to you in a daily digest format which your team can evaluate to find opportunities.

If you don’t already have alerts set up on these services for your company name, do it now. Also set up a more generic alert for your industry as a whole to see what people are talking about. If you want to see what your competition or other big industry players are doing, add those to the mix as well.

Monitoring can also be useful because you can then highlight the big stories on your own social media channels like Facebook, Twitter, Google Buzz, etc.


6. Be Consistent and Don’t Be Afraid to Follow Up


While you don’t want to be creepy (see below), it’s important to not let potential opportunities slip by when using social media. If you’ve answered someone’s question on LinkedIn or on Twitter, don’t be afraid to reach back out to that person to ask if they have any follow-up questions or if you can send them more information. There’s an abundance of opportunity to strengthen a business relationship but it starts by initiating and then making sure that your business is fresh in your prospects’ minds.

Staying engaged and staying communicative is really important. Social media is not about setting it and forgetting it. It’s about being social, so don’t be afraid to reach out and check back in with potential leads you meet using social media. Similarly, don’t be afraid to direct message your followers on Twitter when an opportunity presents itself. They followed you because they want to hear from you. Use that opportunity to your advantage but don’t overdo it. Auto-DMs are a no-no.

If you’re going to blog, don’t leave that blog stagnant. Provide valuable content on a regular basis. Give employees of your company an opportunity to help build your brand. You can get a lot of great blog content by involving many company employees in the process. Similarly, get many employees of your company to utilize the social networks and to be continually responsive to customer inquiries. Remember, the more visible you are on the social networks, the more likely you are to be remembered when another business actually needs to utilize your services.


7. Leverage Your Analytics for Business Metric Measurement


After you’re involved enough in the social space, you’ll likely see tweets, retweets, traffic, and social network links that point to various parts of your company website. Take a look at your website analytics and start seeing where you’re making a difference, especially as it relates to ROI measurement. Don’t lose sight of your business metrics and start considering practical social media measurement to assess clickthroughs, popularity of links, and other important metrics.

As part of measurement, consider using URL shorteners. Not only do they make links more manageable (and limit the number of characters in a Tweet or Facebook message), they also can be a great way to track data as many URL shorteners provide valuable statistics about the performance of each individual shortened URL. Monitor this data throughout the process with your main website analytics package to see if your message attached to the shortened URL resulted in conversions.

When looking at conversion trends or successful tools in building leads with social media, reviewing analytics data is crucial. It gives you insight into content that performs very well in the social space but also through other marketing techniques, such as search engine optimization. Use the data as an opportunity to improve your content or your social media/search marketing efforts.


8. Find and Follow Industry Influencers


B2B social media marketing is often about connecting with the right people and about building relationships. Social media makes both of these actions simple and painless. Being aware of who the influencers in your industry are and then following them, whether it’s on Twitter, Facebook or their own blogs, is the first step to building a connection with those influencers. With a genuine relationship, these influencers may be able to help you make your mark in the social media marketplace. This is especially true of influencers who may already have your target audience at their disposal.

This doesn’t mean you need to retweet every tweet or share every blog post on Facebook, but it does mean that you should be aware of who the movers and shakers are. By following them and then reaching out when appropriate or just to get to know them further, you have a much better shot at getting some attention.

Even if you’re not necessarily connecting to influencers, social media affords the opportunity to connect with other people in your industry and your customers. Use the various social media platforms as an opportunity to connect with these industry colleagues and peers and build upon each other. Consider celebrating your colleagues’ or customers’ success. Make it known that you’re here to help them — not just yourself. Repeat this process with anyone of interest and you’re bound to attract eyeballs.


9. Use Social Media for Giveaways and Promotions


Sometimes, the hardest part of social media is sticking out from the sea of other users. Giveaways and promotions are a great way to help differentiate yourself and your business. Using Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook, you can target your desired customer base and then let them know (if appropriate) about different promotions or giveaways related to your product. If you offer a service, consider giving a free year to a loyal customer. If you manufacture products, give some away.

Offer a coupon on your company’s Facebook Page and pair it with a lead-generation form for future contact. Let people know on Twitter about specials or contests that are going on and follow-up with those that show an interest. Perhaps you can have a retweet contest where you can monitor responses or host some trivia on your Facebook Page. You can also open an online survey to get feedback about your offerings and reward participants. The possibilities are endless. Creativity in this capacity breeds success.

Companies like Wildfire make it really easy to build these sorts of promotions directly inside your own social media channels.


10. Don’t Be Creepy


If you use social media like a keyword searching robot, you are going to come across as creepy and turn off potential clients. Don’t be creepy.

Use best judgment and common sense when approaching people using social networks. If you wouldn’t want to be approached the way you are approaching another user, don’t use that approach. It’s as simple as that. Social media etiquette isn’t much different than real life relationships, so what won’t work in “real life” probably won’t work online.

Respecting boundaries doesn’t mean you can’t still answer questions, engage and follow-up with potential leads, it just means that if it’s clear that the other party isn’t interested, or more importantly, if the context of their communication really doesn’t involve or seek out input from your company, don’t do it.

Context is really important in social media and it is something that is very, very easy to overlook. While we think that using keywords and Google Alerts are good methods for keeping atop of your field, that doesn’t mean you can automate your responses or just go into autopilot based on those alerts.


Your Tips


There are many different social media marketing opportunities for B2B, and there’s great potential for success as more companies jump on the social media bandwagon. How do you use social media in B2B marketing? What tips can you suggest to others? Let us know!


Series supported by MarketingProfs B2B Forum



Drive sales and make social media work for you at MarketingProfs B2B Forum! You’ll learn the ins-and-outs of social media as part of your overall B2B marketing mix – from integration and engagement to measurement. Get 1-on-1 access to the best and brightest B2B marketing stars who will share best practices and FREE advice! Plus, our loyal attendees say our events are ridiculously fun, interactive and the kicker is – we have the best Freebies in the biz! (no keychains here…FREE industry research reports & memberships—stuff to help you really drive sales in 2010!) Register today!

(Photo Courtesy of visual.dichotomy on Flickr)


Reviews: Facebook, Flickr, Google, Google Buzz, LinkedIn, Twitter

Tags: b2b, b2b marketing, b2b marketing series, facebook, linkedin, MARKETING, twitter, wildfire

marzo 18, 2010

What Social Media Users Want [STATS]Mashable!

Twitterers mostly consume news, MySpace users want games and entertainment, Facebookers are into both news and community and Digg’s audience has a mixed bag of interests.

This is all according to online advertising network Chitika, who set out to analyze the interests of MySpace, Facebook, Twitter and Digg users by comparing the genres of sites that receive traffic from these social networks. 287,090 impressions were used in the report, and based on this research, each social site has a distinct makeup of users with unique tastes.

The graphic below breaks it down. What’s most interesting is that nearly half the traffic (47%) that Twitter generates falls into the news category. In fact, Twitter users’ interest in the news genre surpasses that of Facebook users by nearly 20%, which would appear to make it the number-one social network for newsies.

Another interesting tidbit is that MySpace users have no interest in news whatsoever. Instead that corner of the web splits its interests between video games (28%) and celebrity and entertainment content (23%). This aligns with what we’ve seen in terms of MySpace’s business strategy around securing exclusive entertainment content over the past few months and where it’s likely headed for the future.

If anything this data points to the varied interests behind our current obsession with popular social networks. It’s important information for marketers, advertisers and brands hoping to appropriately leverage each site.

Image courtesy of ChrisAt, iStockphoto


Reviews: Digg, Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, iStockphoto

Tags: digg, facebook, myspace, social media, stats, trending, twitter

marzo 17, 2010

Facebook Is for Friends, Blogging Is for BenjaminsHubSpot’s Inbound Internet Marketing Blog

marzo 12, 2010

Digg deja a MySQL por CassandraTechTear

Con el objetivo de mejorar su performance y posibilidad de crecimiento, el sitio de votación y comunidad social Digg ha anunciado que planea reescribir totalmente su infraestructura de software, incluyendo su alejamiento de las bases de datos MySQL que han sido utilizadas desde sus comienzos.

mysql
En lugar del codigo MySQL, Digg planea utilizar una base de datos de código abierto NoSQL llamada Cassandra, que fue diseñada originalmente por Facebook.

Para simplificar la migración de MySQL a Cassandra, los desarrolladores de Digg construyeron una herramienta para pasar los datos de una base a la otra. Dependiendo de este éxito, la herramienta podría convertirse de código abierto para ayudar a otros programadores.

Durante este anuncio, John Quinn, ingeniero de Digg, dijo que construyeron una herramienta, conocida como “transcribe” que se aprovecha de Hadoop, para importar grandes bloques de datos de MySQL a Cassandra.

Vale aclarar que las bases de datos NoSQL son un nuevo tipo de bases que se diferencian de los sistemas de manejo de bases de datos basados en el SQL tradicional. En lugar de utilizar tablas y columnas, NoSQL usa diferentes tipos de almacenamientos y objetos.

Para evitar problemas, Quinn aclaró que Cassandra no es la única base de datos NoSQL que se consideró para Digg, explicando que existen otros sistemas NoSQL populares como CouchDB y MongoDB.

Esta decisión no fue tomada a la ligera, ya que Digg explicó que ha estado probando Cassandra en varios aspectos de sus operaciones desde setiembre del año pasado.

Los programadores indicaron que la funcionalidad de Digg ha sido re-implementada desde MySQL para utilizar Cassandra como su base primaria, aunque Quinn no pudo comentar en la mejora de performance que se espera con la migración.

Finalmente, Quinn explicó que MySQL seguirá siendo utilizada en algunos puntos específicos, ya que este sistema todavía ofrece una flexibilidad que Cassandra no ha alcanzado.

Este post ha sido publicado originalmente en TechTear.com- Blog Magazine de Tecnología, Internet y Negocios

Compártelo

marzo 12, 2010

SXSW: Content Strategy – Fancy Name for a ‘Plan,’ or Key to Marketing Communication?HubSpot’s Inbound Internet Marketing Blog

marzo 11, 2010

What Do Coke, Pepsi, Pampers, Dominos, Google and Facebook Have in Common?HubSpot’s Inbound Internet Marketing Blog

marzo 10, 2010

Get Satisfaction Turns To Facebook To Socialize Customer SupportTechCrunch


Two years ago customer support startup Get Satisfaction turned its ear to Twitter to help its clients monitor Twitter for mentions of brands. Get Satisfaction makes a network of customer support forums where customers can post their own questions, ideas, problems, or conversations about a product. Companies can also claim their board and put their own employees on to moderate the boards. Tapping into the conversations taking place Twitter and other social media sites is now integral to brands and customer support, as we’ve recently seen with Southwest Airlines. Get Satisfaction is extending its social media coverage today by rolling out the ability to add a support tab to Facebook Fan pages.

As companies turn to Facebook Fan Pages to connect with customers, consumers are increasingly voicing their issues with a particular product or brand on the brand’s Facebook page. But often these complaints or opinions can get lost in the stream. That’s where Get Satisfaction comes in. The startup now allows brands to create a tab on their fan pages, which can be a portal for consumers to express their opinions, complaints or issues with the brand or product.

With the Facebook Social Engagement Hub, Get Satisfaction creates a tab (that can be labeled with any brand-specific name) on the brand’s Fan Page. Here customers can begin wall discussions in the form of four topic types: Ask a Question, Share an Idea, Report a Problem, or Give Praise. When customers begin to post a question, Get Satisfaction searches for and suggests similar threads to give consumers instant answers to commonly asked questions. All questions, comments, and answers are discoverable via Google and other search engine. People can respond to any thread — i.e. voice a similar problem, suggest a remedy, emerge as an advocate in response to another’s complaint, or offer a new twist to a product suggestion. Community members can also make their experience heard by simply clicking ‘me too’.

In turn, any question, idea or problem posted on a brand’s hub on Facebook will be automatically imported into the brand’s Get Satisfaction web interface, allowing marketers and customer support reps to access the conversation from their Get Satisfaction site.

Get Satisfaction’s co-founder Lane Becker says that the new offering is a part of helping brands distribute the conversations where the conversations are actually happening. And with 400 million users worldwide, Facebook is definitely a place where the conversations are taking place. Becker says that the startup is particularly focused on the idea of the “social CRM” and helping clients connect the conversations taking place regarding customers support on social media sites with CRM applications like Salesforce and Zendesk. Get Satisfaction currently has free app on Salesforce’s app exchange.

The Facebook offering is a paid feature and Get Satisfaction will have a number of pricing options. Today’s rollout is more targeted towards bigger brands, but a more scaled down offering will be introduced soon and will cost SMBs $99 per month.

Get Satisfaction recently raised $2.3 million in funding, which Becker says is being used to scale out its team. With only 20 employees, Get Satisfaction currently has 20,000 customers (10,000 of which are paid customers). Zappos, Mint.com, Procter & Gamble, and Nike have all created customer support communities on the site. Currently there are over 25,000 communities that have been created on the platform.

marzo 10, 2010

Radian6 Launches Powerful Social Media Engagement and Monitoring Console For Brands And AgenciesTechCrunch


Brands are engaging in the conversations that are taking place on social media sites now more than ever. But in order to tap into the social conversations that are taking place on the web, brands and agencies need to have a powerful tool to track, measure and engage sites such as Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and others. One of the leaders in the social media tracking space, Radian6, is launching a new Engagement Console to streamline this process.

A desktop client built on Adobe AIR, the engagement console lets your both track and engage in the conversation taking place on blogs, videos, forums, boards, Twitter, Flickr, Google Buzz, LinkedIn, Facebook fan pages, public discussion groups, and mainstream news sites. The site also allows for assigning of tasks from within the platform, enabling users to access workflow from within the client.

You can customize a tracking grid of social media sites by breaking out your conversation into stacks by broad or specific topics, tagged customer lists, or even user assignment. Stacks can also be separated out by media type.

Th workflow feature allows you to tag, assign, and route posts to team members, and track the status of the assignments. Any conversations a user engages in, whether it be on Twitter, Facebook or with a co-worker, will be recorded for both the user and the administrator. And of course, the console allows you to Tweet, reply, retweet, and send direct messages, shuffle through user profiles, and follow new contacts right from the platform. Similar to many of the consumer focused social media clients out there, Radian6 allows for unlimited accounts and includes a URL shortener.

With respect to Facebook, the client allows users to respond to status updates, wall posts, comments, and “likes”. Users can also view news feeds for Facebook friends, and see new photos or videos that have been uploaded from within the console. The dashboard also provides analytics from within the console, such as post volume, and engagement stats.

Radian6 has had considerable success in terms of serving big-name clients. The company is currently helping over 10,000 brands track social media sites, including Comcast, MTV, Dell, UPS, GE and Microsoft. And this engagement console has all the bells and whistles to make any brand marketer content. The console, we are told, will be in private beta until April. That being said, there are plenty of other offerings for companies and agencies to track social media and this is a competitive space. Radian6 faces competition from a number of startups including Scout Labs, Visible Measures, Viralheat, HootSuite and PeopleBrowsr.

Information provided by CrunchBase

marzo 10, 2010

11 Free Tools for Social Media OptimizationOnline Marketing Blog

Plenty of bloggers are talking about the inevitable intersection of social media marketing and search engine optimization. Heck, we’ve been blogging about SMO since 2006! Keyword optimized social content and channels of promotion provide abundant signals to search engines for improved visibility on standard, social and real-time search.

The changing nature of social media marketing and optimization create the need for tools whether for research, marketing and promotion or analytics. Here are 11 social media and SEO tools you might find useful:

Below are screen shots of each tool with a more detailed description of how you might use them.

HowSociable is a useful tool to quickly gauge the social presence of a particular keyword or brand name. Agencies like TopRank Marketing will use this kind of tool (customized) to take snapshots of customer social presence metrics for social media optimization programs. For each social site polled, you can clickthrough to see specific mentions.  This is a characteristic of more advanced social media monitoring tools, but for those that want a quick glimpse, HowSocialble is easy to use and the price is right, just like these free social media monitoring tools. However, if you want more comprehensive brand search and monitoring, then a paid social media measurement tool is worth the investment.

KnowEm is both a free and a paid service that will help you easily and quickly check whether your brand terms or other keywords have been registered as social profiles on a wide variety of social media web sites. Everything from blogging platforms to social news and bookmarking services are included. If you don’t want to complete all those profiles yourself, you can pay knowem to do it for you.  Companies invest a lot in building their brand, so this tool is helpful both for creating off site promotion channels as well as guarding against brand name squatters.

Social Media for Firefox is the only browser addon in our list and can be a handy tool to identify upcoming news items that are gaining popularity on certain social news and bookmarking services. A big part of building a more influential user profile is to be a consistent source of submissions for articles that become popular. This addon helps identify articles that are becoming popular on services like Digg, Reddit and StumbleUpon giving you a heads up to submit to other services.  The logic is that if a news item becomes popular on one service it has a good chance of becoming popular on others.  Relevance, timing and focus are key as is patience for this kind of tactic.

SEMRush is an interesting tool for identifying the keyword visibility, both organic and PPC, on Google for pretty much any domain name you might be curious about. Your own or competitors for example. A common question for marketers is, “What are my competitors optimizing for?”. This tool helps uncover that insight and in combination with other standard and social keyword research, can be very helpful insight in a social media optimization program.

Google Insights for Search is a handy tool to research trends in popularity of various keywords on their own or in combination.  Filters for search type, geographic location, industry or topical category and timeframe allow you to refine some pretty useful information about what’s in demand.

Eric Miraglia ’s Inlink Analyzer is a back link analysis tool based on Yahoo’s Site Explorer that not only counts and displays source links to a particular URL, but it also shows if the source links were bookmarked on Delicious and what keyword tags were used. This kind of insight can be quite useful for understanding the relationship between social keywords and link popularity. It would be nice if there was a CSV export option.

Majestic SEO is easily one of the most powerful and useful link analysis tools available. There is a free version that gives you link acquisition counts over time and if you are a site owner, you can get full reporting for your site once you validate it.  If you use the paid service, you can get the juicy link details on your competition.  This tools is useful for finding high impact links for standard SEO but it’s also useful for finding out which social media sites your site or competitors’ site are getting  the most links from.  Also, which of your own social destinations (blog, Facebook, Twitter, etc) are getting inbound links and from where.

Andy Beal’s Trackur service is a very easy to use social media monitoring tool that offers a free version that will satisfy many beginners in the social media optimization space.  Social media monitoring services are keyword based, (queries and negative or exclusionary) and that means some very useful information about how popular certain keyword concepts are on the social web. Of course you can use it to monitor what people are saying about your brand, identify a certain measure of influence and where they’re saying it. But seeing social keyword popularity trends can be quite useful for taking advantage of real-time marketing opportunities.

SocialMention is a free real time and social search tool that offers an array of search options (just blogs, just forums, just bookmarks or all) and output in the search results. You can get an indication of basic sentiment and the top social keywords associated with your query. As a free service, you don’t setup an account and save your search results, but you can easily download them into a spreadsheet. This is probably one of the most useful, free social search tools online.

Bit.ly URL shortening is very handy since they’re included as a default service on Twitter and many other Twitter applications. Bit.ly is rock solid reliable with uptime, which is pretty critical when you’re relying on their URL redirect to send traffic to whatever it is you’re promoting. You can also get basic statistics for each URL that your shorten to show how productive the site is where it was shared.  In today’s succinct social web with Twitter, status updates and micro-content, being able to conserve space with a reliable URL shortener is very helpful. Stats on top of that make this a “go to” URL shortening service.

PostRank offers a nice measure of engagement at the individual document level and if you pay attention, you can get that data on any web site in their database, not just your own. You can easily see what content on your competitors blogs are getting popular and where.  If you sign up for the PostRank Analytics service, you can incorporate Google Analytics data with social engagement metrics. These are essential comparisons in a social media optimization program and can help you understand where to plan your time on the social web.

This is really just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to SEO and Social Media Marketing tools. What low cost or free tools have you found to be effective for social media optimization tasks?

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11 Free Tools for Social Media Optimization |
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marzo 10, 2010

Gestiona tu Reputación Online: monitoriza (y III)eTc :: El blog de Marketing en Español

monitorización
Después de un tiempo he conseguido ponerme con esta tercera y última parte sobre un aspecto importante a la hora de abordar la Gestión de la Reputación Online, que es la monitorización. En el primero de la serie vimos una aproximación al concepto de Reputación Online; mientras que en el segundo abordamos algunos consejos a la hora de medir, algunas ideas sobre qué se puede medir y cómo optimizar el entorno disponible.

Así que hoy nos centramos ya en el meollo de la cuestión, que queda recogido de manera muy visual en la presentación que acompaña al post (tal como hicimos en el anterior), porque creo que es la mejor manera de explicar lo mejor de cada herramienta. Como ejemplo he utilizado los resultados de Innosfera, un evento mensual sobre innovación, promovido por la UOC, y que organizo junto a Javier Velilla y María Jesús Alonso.

En primer lugar, debemos plantearnos si utilizar las herramientas de pago disponibles (en ocasiones si contamos con presupuesto suficiente es recomendable), ya que facilitan la tarea de organizar todo en un lugar, obtener gráficos, etc. Existen muchas, muy especializadas en el Mercado anglosajón, como Radian6, Trackur (recientemente ha sacado una versión gratuita que os aconsejo probar), BuzzStream, Syntesio, Visible Measures…, y nos aburriríamos mencionándolas todas.


Como comentaba, tienen una importante carencia a la hora de monitorizar la web en español. En nuestro país existen también interesantes opciones como Smmart (de Cierzo Development), MambaIQ, la recientemente lanzada “Webrunner 2.0”, una herramienta que he probado y que es muy interesante debido a la amplitud de sitios que monitoriza y a su foco en la web en español.

Por otra lado, tenemos multitud de herramientas gratuitas disponibles en la web, que como tales demuestran sus carencias y no son perfectas. Sin embargo, la combinación de las idóneas nos proporciona excelentes resultados. Para optimizarlas, veremos una selección de aquéllas que muestran resultados aceptables y que permiten la suscripción a las búsquedas de los resultados mediante RSS.

1.- Elige tus “keywords” o listado de palabras clave que te permitan acudir a cada herramienta para realizar la búsqueda y gestionar la suscripción. Algunas ideas pueden ser:

  • Directivos
  • Empresa, filiales…
  • Marcas, nombres de productos, servicios…
  • Slogan (“la chispa de la vida”…)
  • Competencia
  • Sector
  • Proveedores, clientes, socios, etc.

2.- Gestionar los resultados en lectores de RSS:

Como hemos visto lo importante es seleccionar herramientas que permitan suscribirse a los resultados de la búsqueda mediante RSS. Herramientas de lectura hay muchísimas, sin embargo, las más recomendables son:

  • Google Reader: si creamos una cuenta específica para lo que queremos monitorizar puede ser una interesante herramienta. Aunque visualmente mucho más pobre que otras.
  • Netvibes: una excelente herramienta para agrupar en un solo lugar y mediante widgets los resultados de cada herramienta que utilicemos.
  • Feedly: una herramienta también muy visual y que tiene una ventaja, nos va discriminando los resultados de las fuentes que vayamos considerando menos relevantes.
  • Yahoo! Pipes: uno de los problemas a los que nos vamos a hacer frente es la repetición de resultados, ya que muchas herramientas muestra resultados similares. Una adecuada gestión de Pipes nos permite optimizar los resultados y evitar repeticiones.

monitorización2
3.- Herramientas:

Para llevar un orden a la hora de gestionarlas y controlarlas, una interesante división sería:

  • Alertas de Noticias
  • Blogs
  • Comentarios y conversaciones
  • Social Media
  • Marcadores
  • Twitter

3.1.- Alertas de noticias: en este campo Google News Alerts es sin duda la gran referencia. Nos permite recibir alertas al mail o al lector de feeds (RSS), así como introducir otros parámetros de interés como frecuencia, tipo, longitud del mensaje, etc.

3.2.- Blogs:

  • Google Blog Search: nos permite ordenar por relevancia o por fecha, así como establecer parámetros de búsqueda de publicación de resultados (última hora, últimas 12 horas…)
  • BlogPulse: una excelente herramienta gratuita de Nielsen. En portada ofrece resultados centrados en EEUU, por lo que la parte que nos interesa es el buscador. Ofrece interesante opciones como gráficos, búsqueda en conversaciones, búsquedas por url concreta o por fechas…
  • IceRocket: otra de las recomendables a la hora de realizar búsquedas en blogs (aunque también permite buscar en la web, noticias, en Twitter…) Podemos realizar búsquedas por fecha y por idioma, además en la opción “Results Trend”, nos muestra un gráfico sobre la evolución del termino elegido.
  • Twingly: muy útil para buscar en blogs y en Twitter. Permite además agregarte la búsqueda a la barra del navegador, crear una alerta por mail o incluir un widget en tu blog con los resultados. Para realizar búsquedas en Twitter es muy interesante ya que amplia los resultados en el tiempo a mucho más de un mes como suele ser habitual en otros buscadores de Twitter.
  • SocialMention: quizá una de las mejores para realizar búsquedas en la web social, no sólo en blogs. Sin embargo, la incluyo en este epígrafe porque es una de las que muestra un mayor número de resultados en blogs, así como otras opciones relacionadas con la búsqueda como “top keywords”, “top users”, “sentiment”…

3.3.- Comentarios y conversaciones: aquí analizamos las herramientas que nos permiten buscar en los comentarios de los blogs o en foros, en éstos últimos debemos emplear varias herramientas ya que ninguna muestra unos resultados óptimos.

  • BlogPulse.
  • Google Blogs.
  • Backtype: específica para búsquedas de comentarios. No aporta muchos resultados, pero como complemento es interesante. Se ha renovado y también muestra resultados de Twitter.
  • BoardReader: herramienta que nos permite realizar búsquedas en foros.
  • Omgili: al igual que la anterior centrada en búsquedas en foros.
  • BoardTracker.

3.4.- Social Media: aunque herramientas hay muchas y muy útiles, hemos elegido sólo aquellas que permiten la suscripción a los resultados mediante RSS o alertas.

  • SocialMention.
  • El buscador de FriendFeed: muy interesante, ya que nos muestra resultados de todos los servicios de la web social que añaden los usuarios a sus perfiles.
  • Samepoint: muy útil para realizar búsquedas muy completas, ya que incluye resultados de LinkedIn, Facebook, Wikipedia, etc. Un consejo, tiende a mostrar resultados de EEUU, por lo que si introducís una única palabra hacerlo entre comillas para focalice en España (Ej.: “innosfera”)
  • Ubervu: realiza búsquedas muy amplias, muestra gráficos… Permite la suscripción a los resultados mediante alertas de correo electrónico.

3.4. Marcadores: me parece destacable incluir este apartado aparte, ya que Delicious es una interesante herramienta para analizar la repercusión de tus menciones, cómo te etiqueta la gente, quién lo hace…

3.5.- Twitter: sin duda Twitter merece una mención aparte, por su implicación en la conversación, en la web en tiempo real… Entorno a Twitter tenemos miles y miles de herramientas y probablemente mejores de las que he seleccionado; en este caso hemos ampliado a otras que no posibilitan suscripción RSS, pero que sí nos permiten extraer datos interesantes de la conversación.

  • Search.twitter.com: permite la suscripción de resultados por RSS y la búsqueda por idioma.
  • Twazzup: a pesar de que no permite suscripción, es muy interesante porque nos muestra imágenes, noticias, usuarios… que tienen más relación con el término introducido.
  • TweetVolume: Nos muestra gráficamente el volumen de resultados en Twitter de una palabra concreta, permite comparativas con varias palabras.
  • Backtweets: una herramienta muy útil, ya que nos permite introducir una URL y ver qué tweets lindan hacia ella, aunque en el texto no aparezca una palabra clave que busquemos. Permite suscribirnos a los resultados mediante RSS.
  • Trendistic: para analizar evolución de menciones a una palabra en concreto en el tiempo. Nos muestra resultados de la última semana, aunque en su home sí que analizan mucho más en el tiempo.
  • TweetBeep: nos permite recibir en el mail una alerta cada vez que se menciona una palabra que seleccionamos en Twitter.

Ahora toca ponerse en marcha. Gestionar todos los resultados hacia nuestro lector de RSS y tener en un solo lugar toda la información disponible, de manera que no tengamos que acudir a cada herramienta cada vez que queramos buscar información sobre algo en concreto. Os dejo a continuación la presentación:

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territoriocreativoRoberto Carreras trabaja como consultor de comunicación 2.0, además es profesor colaborador en la Universidad Antonio de Nebrija. Puedes seguirle en su blog, en twitter y en sus aportaciones en Yorokobu.