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Marketing Innovation: Best Buy vs. Target

December 17, 2008 By Tim Elliott

bbclogoTwo of the most difficult marketing jobs in Minnesota right now has to be leading local retail giants Target and Best Buy. Although of different scales, Target is about 60% larger than Best Buy, each is facing the same catastrophic pullback in consumer spending that has resulted in each company reporting some of their worst results in years. How each deals with the gloomy outlook in 2009 will be interesting to watch and I expect to see some innovation in their marketing strategies that will help them ride out this tough economy.

As we’ve written here before, Best Buy is one of the leaders in the adoption of social media in the retail industry. Their CMO, Barry Judge, has started blogging and has taken to Twitter. He’s very transparent in his exploration of conversational marketing in interviews like this one. But probably the best overview is a video we posted here last month that features an interview with Best Buy CEO Brad Anderson who clearly is behind their use of social tools and techniques.

Target, in contrast, is opaque on all things social and their CMO, Michael Francis, seems from the corporate model of a brilliant planner, not innovator. Although they have been involved in conversational marketing — I recall meeting blogger Robert Scoble some 3 years ago after a day of meetings at Target — their efforts to date have been mixed. A well planned Facebook campaign was marred by controversy. And there was that episode with bloggers who took issue with a billboard in New York. Not the kind of case studies you would want from a company who clearly is a leading force in retail brand advertising.

So I will be tracking each company and their marketing efforts over the next several months and posting highlights here. If past is prologue, my gut tells me we’ll be seeing a lot of innovation from Best Buy, particularly in their use of social media. But the folks at Target might also surprise us. In these difficult times, the most innovative will likely win.

Filed Under: Marketing Innovation, Social Media Tagged With: Best Buy

What Can We Learn from the Minneapolis Top 100 Twitterers List?

December 15, 2008 By Graeme Thickins

For those of you not yet on Twitter — and aren’t you feeling so smug you’re not wasting as much time as the rest of us? — you’re likely not aware there’s a site called Twitterholic, which ranks the popularity of Twitter users by number of followers.  Actually, despite what non-Twitter users may think, this social-media “microblogging” tool is proving to be quite useful for many in business, media, and even government, if the list of Minneapolis’ Top 100 Twitterers is any indication.

To better understand who’s doing these rankings, here’s how Twitterholic cutely explains itself:

“A few times a day, we calculate individual statistics for each twittering twit in our database. In other words, WE”R IN UR TWTTR PAGES, READN UR STATZ.  This list is updated daily so you can find out who the most popular twitter users are. To participate, do what you normally do — twitter constantly — if you deserve to be on the list, we’ll find you.”
…  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Internet & Web, Social Media

Minnov8 Gang Podcast – Episode 16

December 7, 2008 By Steve Borsch

Social media and networking is pretty fragmented, and it’s important that Minnesota becomes fully invested in using all of it in an innovative way (e.g., Best Buy), and doing innovative startups like OnePlace (think Twitter in collaboration) and Enleiten (group GTD). Thankfully, we’re starting to see a bunch of new approaches that are allowing all of us to gather, consolidate and aggregate our social media and network participation, and keep track of all of these disparate channels of ‘conversation’ as well as all of the digital breadcrumbs we’re leaving all over the Web.

Hosts: Steve Borsch,Tim Elliott, Graeme Thickins, Phil Wilson, Garrick Van Buren

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The Podcast
https://media.blubrry.com/minnov8/minnov8.com/site/wp-content/uploads/podcasts/20081207_M8_Gang_16.mp3

Podcast: Download (Duration: 54:01 — 31.3MB)

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS | More

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We’re blogging; doing vlogs; publishing photos in Flickr and sending messages on Twitter and Identi.ca; social bookmarking like Cullect and Delicious; on networks like Facebook and MySpace *and* joining specialty affinity groups like, for instance, SMBMSP.Ning.com.

Flock, the browser for Windows/Mac/Linux, came out to try to provide a one-stop-shop of all of our disparate, browser-based social media and networking participation. Friendfeed was the one of the first well accepted, Web-hosted one. Now there’s PeopleBrowsr. We’re also seeing inter-connections between social networks, blogs, social bookmarking and channels like Twitter: posting to a blog can appear in Facebook and be sent to Twitter; Twitter messages can be posted on Facebook; Cullect can capture feeds instantly.

Without a dozen tabs open in a browser — or using a tool like Fluid or Mozilla Prism to create a bunch of SSB’s (site specific browsers) or building a dashboard in iGoogle or NetVibes — none of us have enough time in the day to keep tabs on what everyone is doing, participating within all of these channels of communication, and ensuring we’re EVEN AWARE of them in order to participate in relevant and important conversations.

In this show, the Gang discusses where we are and some approaches to solving this chaotic (but fun) mess.

Filed Under: Minnov8 Gang Podcast, Social Media Tagged With: Best Buy, SMBMSP

Rise of the Community Manager

November 30, 2008 By Steve Borsch

As the world continues to get connected to the internet and the number of people participating online using social media to connect to one another accelerates, the role of Community Manager is becoming one that more companies and organizations realize is a critical hire and one they need to consider now.

When the majority of online participants are always-on and always-connected — be it with laptops connected via wifi in a coffee shop or with mobile or smartphones — more are connecting with one another in established social networks (e.g., Facebook, MySpace) or with micro-groups like those anyone can set up at providers like Ning; with micro-messaging platforms like Twitter and Identi.ca; using social bookmarking, photo, video and other offerings; and adjusting their attention and focus as they see fit in any number of possible places to do so online.

This Wikipedia article on social media sums up just some of the places this diffusion of attention can be placed: “Social media can take many different forms, including Internet forums, weblogs, wikis, podcasts, pictures and video. Technologies include: blogs, picture-sharing, vlogs, wall-postings, email, instant messaging, music-sharing, crowdsourcing, and voice over IP, to name a few. Examples of social media applications are Google Groups (reference, social networking),  Wikipedia (reference), MySpace (social networking), Facebook (social networking), Youmeo (social network aggregation), Last.fm (personal music), YouTube (social networking and video sharing), Avatars United (social networking), Second Life (virtual reality), Flickr (photo sharing), Twitter (social networking and microblogging) and other microblogs such as Jaiku and Pownce. Many of these social media services can be integrated via social network aggregation platforms like Mybloglog and Plaxo.”  

If you haven’t poked around (or at least tried out) any of those areas or offerings in the social media category, even understanding the nomenclature and what each social media type enables is an incredible challenge. Where do you start? 

…  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Internet & Web, Social Media

Minnov8 Gang Podcast – Episode 15

November 22, 2008 By Steve Borsch

A lively discussion about social media tools, approaches, and a handful of insights about this hot area from the never-bashful-or-lacking-for-opinions Gang.

Hosts: Steve Borsch, Tim Elliott, Graeme Thickins, Phil Wilson, Garrick Van Buren

The term “social media” has many connotations depending upon whom you ask for an opinion or insight about what it covers, what it means, and exactly what sort of ‘media’ comprises it (e.g., blogging, social networking, social bookmarks, video sharing, et al).

We certainly don’t try to make this show a primer or any sort of comprehensive overview of the social media space, but we’re each in-the-game using several forms of it, advising clients and others on its use, and being surprisingly connected with most of the other thought leaders in social media nationally, so we’re exposed to quite a bit and cover alot of ground in this podcast.

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The Podcast
https://media.blubrry.com/minnov8/minnov8.com/site/wp-content/uploads/podcasts/20081122_M8_Gang_15.mp3

Podcast: Download (Duration: 52:33 — 30.5MB)

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS | More

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Show notes:

+ Social Media Breakfast who brought in Jeff Pulver for this month’s meeting

+ Pistachio Consulting (Laura Fitton) who published “Enterprise Microsharing Tools Comparison” (PDF or view full screen here at Scribed)

+ Tools: TubeMogul; Ping.fm; OnePlace’ new “Twitter-like” feature addition; Delicious and Cullect; Tweetie for the iPhone (iTunes URL); Analytics: Collective Intellect; Radian6; Google Analytics add-ons like these hacks and tips and this Social Media Metrics Greasemonkey Plugin For Google Analytics

+ Mentions: Motrin Moms controversy; Tim O’Reilly‘s Twitter stream and, curiously, the fact that his archive page doesn’t save or reference his tweets; Google Friend Connect

+ Other: “A Chronology of Brands that Got Punk’d by Social Media” by Jeremiah Oywang and a “Groundswell” slideshow, with great info, here (and there are other ‘Related Slideshows’ worth viewing on this page.

+ The final report has been released and it’s very enlightening if you’re involved in social media in any way. “Kids’ Informal Learning with Digital Media: An Ethnographic Investigation of Innovative Knowledge Cultures” is a three-year collaborative project funded by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Carried out by researchers at the University of Southern California and University of California, Berkeley, the digital youth project explores how kids use digital media in their everyday lives. (via Danah Boyd)

  • Two page summary (PDF)
  • White Paper – Living and Learning with New Media: Summary of Findings from the Digital Youth Project (PDF)
  • Article here in The New York Times and many others.

Filed Under: Minnov8 Gang Podcast, Social Media Tagged With: SMBMSP

Playing Tag at Social Media Breakfast

November 20, 2008 By Phil Wilson

Thursday morning (11/20) saw another gathering of Social Media Breakfast at Best Buy headquarters. This was a “special” event presented by Best Buy rather than the gathering those who attend the event each month have come to expect.

It was billed as “Breakfast with Jeff Pulver“. Jeff is considered a true VOIP pioneer and a very active enthusiast in social media or what he terms “Social Communications”…a term  more fitting to this movement since it focuses on the act of communicating rather than the medium through which we do it.  He hosts breakfasts around the world and, as it appears, he is using them to practice Personal Tagging.

…  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Internet & Web, Social Media

Best Buy CEO Interview on Use of Social Media

November 16, 2008 By Steve Borsch

Friend of Minnov8, expert in web design, Randy Geise — and a guy who was design director for the first launch of BestBuy.com — sent along this link to a video interview about social media with Best Buy CEO Brad Anderson. Thought you’d like to have a chance to view it (thanks Randy!):

From this post by Peter Hischberg

Filed Under: Social Media Tagged With: Best Buy

Lessons From Our First “Social Media” President

November 5, 2008 By Steve Borsch

One of the keys to marketing campaign management is ensuring that a message, advertisement or call to action is delivered “at the customer touch point”, or that place where the advertisement or content can be delivered and where the customer or prospect is likely to be receptive to it. 

The Obama campaign’s effectiveness in delivering their messages and calls to action will be hyper-analyzed over the next several months. From large spending on traditional media to leveraging the internet, tapping in to the social media zeitgeist, and engaging with people (especially young people) in ways never before possible was a key component to their win.

In this unprecedented traditional media and online media use, there are key lessons here for every company, organization, movement or individual wanting to sell, build brands, move an agenda forward, or build an ecosystem.

…  [Read More…]

Filed Under: Social Media

Minnov8 Gang Podcast – Episode 11

October 25, 2008 By Steve Borsch

Regardless of your political views, citizen journalism, social media use in activism, and a massive shift in tools for creating video, audio and then self-publishing and distributing it, is fundamentally changing the way political opinions are shaped and one guy is at the epicenter of that trend in Minnesota.

Chuck Olsen is a cofounder of The UpTake, a non-profit dedicated to training and distributing the work of video-based citizen journalists. He is also the founder of Minnesota Stories (soon to relaunch), called one of the best videoblogs by the New York Times. He is the producer-director of “Blogumentary,” the first documentary film about the rise of political and personal blogs. His work has screened at the Walker Art Center, Get Reel Documentary Film Festival, Harvard University, and on renegade laptops all around the world. He is the Minneapolis correspondent for Rocketboom and works as a freelance producer, videographer, editor and educator.

Chuck’s personal blog, Blogumentary, is here.

Hosts: Steve Borsch, Tim Elliott, Phil Wilson, Garrick Van Buren

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The Podcast
https://media.blubrry.com/minnov8/minnov8.com/site/wp-content/uploads/podcasts/20081025_M8_Gang_11.mp3

Podcast: Download (Duration: 44:08 — 25.7MB)

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS | More

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Mentioned during this show are:

+ Julio Ojeda-Zapata’s (blog) article in the Pioneer Press that kickstarted Chuck’s notoriety

+ Technology and other links of stuff mentioned includes:

  • Funder of TheUptake, America Votes
  • Qik (and Kevin Rose‘s demo of iPhone streaming) used for TheUptake streaming
  • Twitter
  • Zanby
  • Flixwagon (what Chuck uses for personal streaming video)
  • Mogulus – a live broadcast video platform
  • Civicspace which is built on Drupal
  • The hottest video at TheUptake right now (due to recent controversy on the Chris Matthews show), Michele Bachmann’s “Not All Cultures Are Equal” video;
  • CafePress
https://media.blubrry.com/minnov8/minnov8.com/site/wp-content/uploads/podcasts/20081025_M8_Gang_11.mp3

Podcast: Download (Duration: 44:08 — 25.7MB)

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS | More

Filed Under: Internet & Web, Minnov8 Gang Podcast, Social Media

David Meerman Scott to Speak at ‘Social Media Breakfast’ in Twin Cities October 31

October 17, 2008 By Graeme Thickins

I’m really happy to report that I successfully convinced one of my famous-author friends to speak to our next Social Media Breakfast here in the Twin Cities. We call it “SMBMSP” for short, and this is our eighth monthly event.  David Meerman Scott, a very well-traveled and popular speaker, is the author of the top-selling book, The New Rules for Marketing and PR.  He told me back in August that he’d be coming to MInneapolis for a seminar on October 30, so I asked him if he would consider staying over another night if we could schedule one of our breakfast meetings on the 31st.  He was gracious enough to say yes, so we got some sponsors, and now we have it all scheduled.

It will be held at Deluxe Corp’s headquarters in Shoreview, MN, thanks to my friend Steve Nielsen, whose company, PartnerUp.com, was recently acquired by Deluxe. The meeting is scheduled for 8:00 to 10:30 am on Friday, October 31. Attendance is free, open to anyone interested in social media, and the first 100 attendees will receive a free copy of David’s book. (By the way, David blogs here.) To register, go to our group’s social network site at smbmsp.ning.com, click on the “Events” tab, then click on “SMB-Twin Cities 8,” and then look for the “Order Now” button. Or, just go directly to our RSVP page. The Minnov8 gang looks forward to seeing you there!  Oh — and costumes are optional…  🙂

Filed Under: Events, Social Media

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