A Social Media Storm This Week

Believe me when I say it has been a social media storm this week.  I am not referring to the craziness we have seen about Microsoft offering a bazillion dollars for the purchase of Yahoo, but the fact that my business is social media consulting and business is good.

There are times in a budding new business when you have that moment to cut your losses and run with what you have, and I must admit I had that moments once a day when I first started as a consultant in this industry.  Some days I would have paid someone else to take it all and never let me see it again.

Then after the 4 years we have been going here, I have a week like this one where everything clicks.  Everything I touch turns to gold and nothing could possibly go wrong.  Well, that didn’t exactly happen, there was the fiasco with my hosting company and the Bloggers For Hire site disappearing and going AWOL, but for the most part the things under my control actually worked.  These are the days where I would not sell my company for all the money in the…  Let’s not lose out heads, Microsoft feel free to call my number is on the contact page.

There was a social media storm this week and it was a good storm.  One that washed out all the bad stuff and provided rain for the stuff that grows.  Not all storms are bad and this week proved it.  Heck I even posted twice in one week!  Now can someone please tell me how to replicate that?

New Beginnings For A Social Media Consultant

Some crazy things have been happening here at One By One Media since we walked into the airport in Las Vegas, Nevada at the Blog World and New Media Expo last year.  The craziness began as just a simple presentation at the Expo and has since snowballed into lots of new business, many new professional bloggers coming to our pool of talent, an east coast trip for another fun presentation, the holiday madness seasoned in with the year end, and finally ending the year with a change in leadership here at One By One Media.

Those that don’t already know of the leadership change I speak of, Tris Hussey my long time partner has gone on to tackle more exciting adventures with the very cool people over at b5 Media.  This move provided Tris with a little more stability and really focuses his talents on what Tris does best.  I am very sad to have this change, but we are striving to make the transition with as little mess as possible.

So where do we go from here?  I liken it to a new journey and a new beginning.  I have been making the adjustments to the transition, have been working with different people to accomplish some of the tasks Tris was doing, and have moved on to making One By One Media the leader in the social media consulting world.  That may seem like biting off more than I can chew, but then again, that is usually my case and par for my course.

I look forward to reconnecting with old friends and new friends.  I continue to help clients that are veterans of our services and clients yet to be discovered.  I’ll be talking more about them and what they do, and more about what we are doing for them.  I’m very excited to pick up the slack that has been the case here and I am blowing off the dust a little and cleaning up the rust. 

Happy Holidays and Happy New Year!

It may be a little late, but I wanted to personally wish all of you a Happy Holiday season and especially a Happy New Year!  2008 will see some changes here at One By One Media, and I will be following up on that more.  One of the changes will be the look and feel here and also at Bloggers Fore Hire.  This is right now a classic example of a Cobbler’s son having no shoes.  We have become very busy with a longer list of clients, and the holidays have been crazy as well as the travel I have been doing around the country speaking to groups and attending functions.  Stay tuned for a new rollout of new features to the site, and about other news we have coming up that should be exciting.  In the meantime, I need to get back to the grind.

We Are Here, We Are Blogging, We Are Evolving, We Are One By One Media

Many of you have come by here and wanted to know what is going on in the world of One By One Media, and why we have been dormant.  There are many reasons( you know what they say about excuses), but the biggest of which is we are terribly busy, and suffice it to say that in this case, blogging here seems to have taken a back burner priority.  Those darn clients and customers can be so demanding!

We were recently out in Las Vegas at the Las Vegas Convention Center attending, exhibiting and speaking at the Blog World and New Media Expo last week, and I for one am trying to get my feet under me again from what turned out to be a smashing success for us here at One By One Media and for Bloggers For Hire.  I am working on a recap post with photos and all kinds of information and I will be posting that shortly.  I was so glad to get to meet many people in our blogging industry, (yes we are now our own industry) and actually meet in the flesh those that I feel I have known as colleagues and friends online for a long time.  We are about to launch a new look and feel at One By One Media, so stay tuned for more of that soon.  For now, we are trying to get back into gear and up to speed.

Google: There is no mistaking their brand!

9th_birthday Today I have been reading about the fact that it is Google’s birthday.  Although there seems to be some confusion as to the age of Google and when exactly they consider the day they were actually born, there is no mistaking their brand.  The primary colors you see and the definite logo look no matter the season or occasion is never mistaken.  It seems that the company has been around since the day that “fruit company” was born, but in terms of shelf life, I suppose this company is really fresh.  Whether it be 9 years 10 years or not, the fact that they have more money than most countries is a reason to celebrate their birthday.

In their relatively short term life, they have become a household name, a verb, and probably the most recognizable brand on the planet.  My 80+ year old grandmother and my 6 year old son both know the company and what it does.  It has become a part of our everyday life and is woven into our daily routine as a fabric of our existence.  I tried to think of a company that had such an impact on a global scale as has the fine folks at Google.  I’m not sure I could possibly name a company that is such a part of the lives of so many.  I can still remember the first time I heard about Google.  I was working in the legal field and was doing online research about companies and people, and someone told me to try this company that is revolutionizing the way we search for things online.  Never did I see then what I see today, and especially in such a short period of time.  It makes me wonder where we will stand when we are talking about their 25th birthday or perhaps not even that long but in 5 years where will they be?  I’m sure that prophets more idealistic than I will have a field day with that question.  How about you?  Where do you see Google in 5 more years?  Should we be afraid?  I must admit I am a little spooked myself at how powerful this company has become in the time it has been alive.  Happy Birthday Google and many happy returns.

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Let the Facebook Auction Begin…Do I hear $10 Billion?

facebook We all know at some point Facebook will be given a value.  If not just for the purpose of a price tag for the moguls out there to aspire to achieve.  It seems that the Wall Street Journal believes that price may be $10Billion or more.  The article states:

Microsoft’s approach to Facebook in recent weeks with proposals to invest in the fast-growing site is part of the software giant’s effort to catch up with the Internet rival Google. If successful, Microsoft’s talks with Facebook could give it an up-to-5% stake in the closely-held startup — a stake potentially valued at roughly $300 million to $500 million, the people familiar with those talks said.

I think that if it’s worth $10Billion to Microsoft, why not $20Billion to Google.  If nothing more than to drive a stake into the heart of the monster we know as Microsoft.  If we get enough of the foxes in the hen house, we could see a bidding war of the big boys, which will be a historical acquisition of a stake in a company that is showing signs of the next big thing.  I say that tongue in cheek of course, because I believe Facebook has them right where they want them.  Now what do you suppose they will do with them?

The New Era of Social Media: The Growth Stage and Education

On the same vein as my lost post regarding a blogging hiccup or what I see as a new era of business blogging, we are now at a crossroad of corporate advertising, marketing and PR online.  There are many forward thinking companies that are early adopters, and especially in the technical world where technology is seen as a tool to harness if you want to succeed.  So where are we in the adoption of social media as it relates to the rest of the companies and corporations?  We are at a new beginning, the stage of educating the rest of the world. Those companies that didn’t get it, the ones that want to see what the early adopters did and what worked and what didn’t.

800px-ProductLifeCycle We have seen it in our own business model here at One By One Media and Bloggers For Hire.  We really didn’t have to sell real hard to get companies that were contacting us about business blogging and hiring bloggers.  They wanted to adopt the technology and they wanted to make it a part of their online presence.  They were already sold on the idea.  All I or any other social media consultant had to do was implement the tools necessary for the company to join in the social media world.  We had the good life then, and our sales were self fulfilling prophecies.  Now we are in the education stage of the rest of the world.  These companies and corporations are not yet sold on the idea of social media.  In fact, I think it was stated best in a post and thread at the newly canceled Blog Business Summit.

Steve Broback wrote:

Like the Lambada, I don?t believe my original, 1990?s era event model is nearly as viable as it used to be, and certainly not so for the BBS. The BBS really never attracted the huge numbers of marketing and PR types that clearly *needed* to learn this stuff. I tried very hard with the Chicago event to attract that demographic and our efforts washed up on shore like a dead fish.

In addition, we emailed, snail mailed, and telephoned 250 CTOs and CIOs and invited them to come and learn how Wikis and blogs can enable internal knowledge sharing. They were terrified, and only 3 signed up. A couple even said they were ?too busy? with their current efforts to reign in email overload to take the time to attend(!) (emphasis added)

This was a very astute thought and a comment by Kevin Hillstrom about the event:

In the posts of the past two days, one can see that you feel hurt by spending so much time and effort to evangelize something you believe in, only to have to make tough choices that may, on the surface, appear contrary to what you?ve evangelized over a period of several years.

It will probably be hard, but try to not blame people who ?don?t get it?. It is just as likely that people failed to do a good job of educating folks as it is that people ?don?t get it?. You?ll never know which of those two issues is the right one.

Teresa mentioned that companies that don?t get this are ?sunk?. They aren?t. They are simply missing an opportunity to improve the performance of their business.

When the conversation turns to picking on the ones who you are trying to evangelize, you make it that much harder to be successful in the long term.

Don?t feel bad about having to cancel something you so strongly believed in. Spend your efforts moving forward, showing folks that they can benefit by doing what you?re suggesting, and that what you?re suggesting is evolving and changing every day.

I sent two folks to your conference last year. One of those folks made a difference in her organization, armed with the knowledge she gained. Know that your efforts do help others who have an interest in your subject matter.

Kevin’s comment is spot on in my opinion.  We will need to show the examples of the past early adopters.  We need to take those examples and show the rest of the corporate world how the companies used the tool and how it benefited them and provide hard numbers for those companies to see for a return on their investment. As mentioned, Teresa stating that companies not adopting this social media tool are not sunk, but if companies want to differentiate themselves from their competitors, they can, if not, they are missing the opportunity.  I think we agree on the fact that if a company misses out on enough opportunities, sooner than later they will eventually sink  and die.  It will be up to them if they sink or swim, but it is up to us as social media consultants to throw them a life raft if needed.

So where do we go from here?  Now is truly the call for social media consultants to become evangelists. It’s time to stop preaching to the choir and truly find followers that want to succeed in business using social media tools.  Now is when we have the tough sell.  The easy sell is a thing of the past.  Pull in your numbers, get those examples ready, and show what you have done, and what you can do in the future.  It’s not going to be the easy contract that you get now, but one that you truly earn.

A One By One Media Client Makes The Wall Street Journal

It’s not often we get to toot our horn around here, but when we can, I like to play it loud and play it often.  I was reading through the comments section of the blog and noticed that Alex has given us a link to a Wall Street Journal article by Sarah Needleman entitled Blog It and They May Come. The article discusses small businesses and their blogging campaigns.  It was a nicely written article and it does point our some of the problems we see from small businesses, this blogging thing is work.

To my pleasant surprise, about half way through the article I saw a familiar name.  I was looking at a past client that used our services and is now being interviewed and quoted in the Wall Street Journal!

Making the Link

Ty’s Toy Box Inc., an online retailer based in Erlanger, Ky., has lured people to its blog about trends in the toy-licensing industry by having other blogs and Web sites link to it. The company arranged a link-exchange agreement in April with TheToyGuy.com, a Web site from toy-industry expert Chris Byrne that features news and product reviews.

“We coordinated it so that occasionally our blog and Chris’s blog are about the same issue, but from different perspectives,” says George Stolpe, vice president of business development and media relations for Ty’s Toy Box. The two blogs link to each other in each post, he says.

Ms. Melberg says the links help boost a company’s search-engines ranking because blogs recommended by external sources rank higher than ones without link referrals.

According to Mr. Stolpe, Ty’s Toy Box pays a free-lance writer to maintain its blog and says the total cost for it is “a very minimal amount.” He says while he can’t quantify the blog’s role in the near-triple-digit average growth in sales every year since its start, he has no doubt it has played an important part.

After seeing that I was proud of Ty Simpson and George Stolpe for sticking it out and seeing the power of blogging.  They paid one of our bloggers for a while and decided on a different path but finally stuck to it in the long run and now they are a feature in the Wall Street Journal.  I’m not saying all of our client’s will be this much of a success, but if I have anything to do with it you can bet I’ll try!

Join One By One Media in Chicago at the Blog Business Summit 07

BBSChicagoSponsor One By One Media is once again a proud sponsor of the Blog Business Summit in Chicago, September 17-19, 2007.  We were a sponsor last year in Seattle and it proved to be some of the best marketing money I have ever spent.  Money is tight in every small company, but if you plan to attend any social media type conference this year, this one is the one you should choose to attend.  If you are a large company, you better attend so as to compete with the smaller businesses wanting a piece of your social media pie.

This conference is the premiere event for all things business blogging.  Each time I have attended I have learned new things about business blogging, have met new friends, and have made important contacts that were important to my business.  The parties are fun, the hallway discussions are invaluable and they usually have some great food and provide excellent facilities.  This year is their first year in the middle of the country and not on the West coast so I know it will open up some opportunities for the east coasters and southern attendees to get a taste of the fun. 

If you want to attend, and would like to get a discount, of course who wouldn’t want a discount, then all you need to do is enter in a simple code when signing up for the event.  One By One Media has been given a special discount code you can use.  When registering just use P65CHI and you get an immediate savings of $100.00.  Can’t beat it!  If you decide to use this code to sign up for the conference, I will personally give you a free gift!  In order to find out how cool that gift is, you need to sign up and use the code!

Bloggers Unite! Bloggers Beginning Grassroots Movement to Unionize

I read via my friend David Krug at Telegraphik that bloggers in the political arena are wanting to start their own Blogger’s Union.  Ashley M Heher of Fox News is reporting that:

In a move that might make some people scratch their heads, a loosely formed coalition of left-leaning bloggers are trying to band together to form a labor union they hope will help them receive health insurance, conduct collective bargaining or even set professional standards.

This could only be coming from the left of course.  Oh sorry Tris, I said I wouldn’t do that!

I’m having a difficult time seeing Susie Blogger breaking kneecaps on a virtual picket line, or how this union would gather enough strength to actually be viable.  The article goes on to state:

Few bloggers are paid for their posts, and even fewer are able to make a living doing the work. But many say they often devote as much energy and time to their online musings as they do to their salaried careers.

While bloggers work to organize their own labor movement, their growing numbers are already being courted by some unions.

I’m wondering what companies like ours would do if a union system would be formed.  I’m certainly not a fan of unions, and I would not be adopting their charter or bylaws into my own organization.  Yes, I can see where it might make it better for private companies to get better paying blogging jobs, but I don’t think we are at that point yet with the adoption of blogging as a viable career in most companies.  Companies contact me everyday for wanting to hire a blogger, and when I give them a price, they usually get sticker shock.  They are not yet ready to pay full salaries and in most cases are not even ready to adopt what would even be close to minimum wages for the amount of time put into a blog post.

It seems that the Writer’s Unions is courting bloggers to join their ranks.  I’m not sure if this is in response to the latest debate of credentials for bloggers like journalists, but it seems that blogging is getting to be more of a mainstream idea in that arena.

The idea of a union may appeal to the ones looking for benefits, and other things unions bring, but I can see no way that they would compete with the free lancer, and the outsourcing taking place in corporations today.  I will definitely be watching the talk on this issue.  I will let you know now I would pay any of my bloggers the going union rate, but first we have to find companies willing to pay that amount.  Good luck to them.