Posts Tagged ‘Social network’

 

By Tracy Gold
Source: http://www.marketingtrenches.com/marketing-careers/how-to-use-linkedin-powerfully-10-tips-to-know/

LinkedIn is a powerful tool for making business connections—but it is just that, a tool. Even the most active users miss on some simple ways to optimize the way they use LinkedIn. This was true for me—I recently attended a seminar on LinkedIn by Colleen McKenna, and learned a few ways to kick my LinkedIn presence up a notch.

Now, I’m not going to give away Colleen’s secret sauce (you’ll have to head to one of her seminars for that) but below are a few tips from both my experience and Colleen’s talk on how to make the most of your LinkedIn presence.

1. Think about your goals. Why are you on LinkedIn? To find new employees, partners, and contractors? To be found? A mix? Your goals should drive your entire presence.

2. Post a picture. Please. Of your face. You should have a professional looking headshot as your LinkedIn photo so people can put a name to a face. If you’re uncomfortable with recruiters or prospective clients seeing your picture next to your professional credentials (a valid concern), you can change your privacy settings so only your connections can see your photo.

3. Use LinkedIn to remember names. LinkedIn can help you with offline networking too—simply checking out someone’s profile after meeting them at a networking event, even if you don’t connect, can help you remember their name and what they do. This is another reason why having a picture is important—it will help people remember you.

4. Make the most of your headline. Colleen really stressed this one—your headline does not have to be your job title alone. Job seekers, use “Talented [Your Profession] Seeking New Opportunity” not “Unemployed.” Students, use “Aspiring [Your Profession] Seeking Internship,” not “Student at [Your University].” Keep it concise, but make sure it communicates what you do and what your skills are. Here’s mine:

My LinkedIn headline.

5. Post statuses. Updating your status gives you visibility on your connections’ LinkedIn home page. If you have found something online your business connections would like, or have good news to share about your work, spread the word by posting it on LinkedIn.

6. Write a rich but concise summary. Your summary should be about you, not your company—don’t just copy and paste the “about” page of your employer’s website. Your profile should be about what you do at your company, not what the company does as a whole. Tip: use concrete details like results you have generated and tasks you do on a daily basis to show people how awesome you are, not tell them.

7. Explore LinkedIn applications. Colleen encouraged us all to add Amazon’s Reading List application to our LinkedIn profiles. I was skeptical—I wasn’t sure how the fiction I love would be relevant to my professional connections. However, Colleen got more comments on this list, she said, than anything else in her profile. Sure enough, a few hours after I added Reading List to my profile, in came a message from a connection. She had written her senior thesis on Steinbeck and wanted to know what I thought of East of Eden. If you’re not a big book person, you can still enrich your profile with apps like Slideshare for presentations, WordPress for blog posts, and any number of others (the directory is here).

8. Add sections to your profile. LinkedIn offers several sections beyond the standards so users can showcase volunteer experience, projects, foreign languages, even test scores. This is especially helpful for young networkers who may not have extensive work experience, but adding more sections can add weight to any profile.

9. Connect with care. Your LinkedIn network is only as valuable as the strength of your connections. For some professionals—like recruiters or salespeople—it is advantageous to connect generously, but personally, I favor being a tad picky. I’d like to think I could recommend—or at least answer questions about—anyone I am connected to on LinkedIn. If you want to connect with someone and think it might be a stretch, be sure to personalize the message you send with the invite to explain why you want to connect—and why this person should want to connect with you.

10. Join and participate in groups. Some groups are full of spam, but others are generally valuable. For example, in the marketing industry, the Marketing Director Support Group is a great place to get and give advice. Do a little research, think back to your goals, and you’ll likely find a group that will help you reach them. If you can’t find a group, just start one!

Did you find anything new in this LinkedIn advice? Have anything to add? I’d love to hear from you in the comments.

About the Author: Tracy Gold is a Marketing and Content Associate at Right Source Marketing. Let her know your thoughts on this post—comment away! Follow Tracy on Twitter for more marketing commentary.

 

101Social Media and Social Network Tools

Source: http://hosting.ber-art.nl/101-social-media-and-social-network-tools/

Social media is a type of online media that expedites conversation as opposed to traditional media, which delivers content but doesn’t allow readers/viewers/listeners to participate in the creation or development of the content.

Social media essentially is a category of online media where people are talking, participating, sharing, engaging, networking, and bookmarking online.

Social Media is media for social interaction, using highly accessible and scalable communication techniques. Social media is the use of web-based and mobile technologies to turn communication into interactive dialogue.

101 Social Media and Social Network SEO Tools

MUST-SEE SOCIAL MEDIA TOOLS

MARKETING

  • Shoutlet - Enterprise social marketing platform.
  • Awareness, Inc. - Publish, manage, measure, engage.
  • Unified – The world’s first social operating platform. Enterprise marketing.
  • Wildfire – Promotion, analytics, monitoring and more.
  • EngageSciences - The fastest growing European social marketing vendor.
  • LocalResponse – Helps marketers respond to real-time consumer intent.
  • GraphScience – Leverage the social graph. Optimize Facebook marketing.
  • GoChime – Reach the people who are a perfect fit for your products.
  • Adly – Celebrity endorsements in social media.
  • Hy.ly - From fans to leads. Facebook presence, contents and more.
  • SocMetrics – Engage influencers.
  • MarketMeSuite – Your free social inbox. End-to-end social marketing.
  • Fanplayr – Social game marketing.
  • memelabs - Branded Facebook contests and much more.
  • PowerVoice – Advertisers harness a consumer-to-consumer platform.
  • Lithium – Social community and marketing solutions.
  • Syncapse - Social media marketing, measurement and management.
  • Vitrue - Helps you utilize social communities for business.
  • Adotomi – Performance marketing for social media.
  • Zoniz – Full-service social marketing management platform.
  • Argyle Social - Data-driven social media marketing software.
  • Buddy Media - Offers a social enterprise marketing suite.
  • Extole – Consumer-to-consumer social marketing.
  • BuzzParadise - International network of social media advertising.
  • Zuberance - Energize your brand advocates.
  • Involver - A social marketing platform and more.
  • Silentale - Market and customer insights for Facebook page data.
  • SocialTwist - Acquire new customers using social referrals.
  • eCairn - Social media marketing solutions for marketing agencies.
  • Bazaarvoice – Ratings and Social Commerce software

MONITORING and INTELLIGENCE

  • Netvibes - Social media monitoring, analytics and alerts dashboard.
  • Brandwatch - Social media monitoring tools.
  • ThinkUp - Free open source social media insights platform.
  • DataSift - Unlock insights from historical Twitter data.
  • Odimax - Actionable intelligence for social media marketing.
  • GlobalWebIndex - Provides data on users of your web presence.
  • Attentio - See what the world is saying about your brand.
  • Traackr - Find the influencers who matter to you.
  • Unmetric - The social benchmarking company.
  • LiveWorld - Moderation, community programming and actionable insight.
  • PeerIndex - Understand your influence across social media.
  • Jive - Social media monitoring and much more.
  • ethority – Social media intelligence.
  • CliMet - Maintain your brands reputation on Facebook and Youtube.
  • YourBuzz - Get the buzz on your business.
  • Eqentia - Enterprise content curation, monitoring and republishing.
  • Sentiment Metrics - Social media monitoring, measurement, engagement.
  • MutualMind - Intelligently monitor, analyze and engage.
  • Appinions - Discover and engage leading influencers on any topic.
  • Social Fixation - Apps. Automation. Awesomeness.
  • Digimind - Competitive intelligence and online reputation monitoring.
  • StepRep - Listen to what people are saying about your brand online.
  • Trackur - Social media monitoring made easy.
  • CustomScoop - Online news clipping and social media monitoring.
  • Beevolve - Comprehensive and affordable social media monitoring.
  • Visible - Social media monitoring, analytics and engagement.
  • Sysomos - Social media monitoring tools for business.

SOCIAL CRM

  • Radian6 - Social media monitoring and engagement, social CRM.
  • Sprout Social - Social media management, Twitter tools, social CRM.
  • Spredfast - Social CRM and enterprise marketing.
  • Nimble - Social CRM simplified. Turn communities into customers.
  • Sprinklr - Social CRM, enterprise social media dashboard.

MANAGEMENT

BLOGS and WEBSITES

AGENCIES

  • Banyan Branch – Social media strategy, engagement, analysis and more.
  • Converseon – Social strategy and analytics agency.
  • Brickfish – viral map software – top clients (Redbox, Lemonhead)
  • Splashcube – Social media marketing and training.
  • WannaBeeSocial – Southwest Airlines of Social Agencies
  • Webtrends – Social, mobile and web analytics and tools.
  • iStrategyLabs – Experimental social media marketing and more.

OTHER

  • Klout - Measures social media influence.
  • ShopVisible - Social commerce solution
  • Yammer – The enterprise social network.
  • Gigya - Social login, social plugins, analytics, gamifaction and more.
  • TrustYou – Social media monitoring for the hospitality industry.
  • Cyfe – All-in-one business dashboard and real-time monitoring.
  • Janrain – Social login, social profile storage, game mechanics, analytics.
  • BzzAgent – A word of mouth marketing company.
  • IZEA – Connects social media publishers with advertisers.
  • Lotame – Data and audience management platform.
  • OneDesk – Connect employees, partners and customers.
  • SocialVibe – Engagement marketing.
  • TwentyFeet - Social media monitoring and ego-tracking.
  • Timehop – What were you doing 1 year ago today?
  • Refollow – Discover, manage and protect your Twitter social circle.

by MindTools

“There’s too much wrangling and maneuvering going on – I just hate this office politicking”. “Joe, well he’s a smart political mover – knows exactly how to get what he wants and how to get on.” Whether you hate it, admire it, practice it or avoid it, office politics is a fact of life in any organization. And, like it or not, it’s something that you need to understand and master to be sure of your own success.

“Office politics” are the strategies that people play to gain advantage, personally or for a cause they support. The term often has a negative connotation, in that it refers to strategies people use to seek advantage at the expense of others or the greater good. In this context, it often adversely affects the working environment and relationships within in. Good “office politics”, on the other hand, help you fairly promote yourself and your cause, and is more often called networking and stakeholder management.

Perhaps due to the negative connotation, many people see office politics as something very much to be avoided. But the truth is, to ensure your own success and that of your projects, you must navigate the minefield of Office Politics. If you deny the ‘bad politics’ that may be going on around you, and avoid dealing with them, you may needlessly suffer whilst others take unfair advantage. And if you avoid practising ‘good politics’, you miss the opportunities to properly further your own interests, and those of your team and your cause. (more…)

Posted on August 1, 2011 by articlefileda

Article Marketing is a great way to drive traffic. Combine it with Twitter and LinkedIn and you have a beautiful traffic triangle working for you, leveraging some of the top ranked sites online today.

WARNING: One of my best traffic tips ahead. Proceed with action.

A beautiful traffic triangle

Most people come online and then chase after traffic. Don’t do what most people do because most people are broke. One of the first things you to quickly learn online is to stop chasing after traffic. What you want to do instead is find out where the traffic is going and get in front of it.

I know that is easy to say. So let’s put some hands and feet on that notion right now.

When you have each new article published on the article directory I use the most, when your account is set up correctly, an automatic New Article Update is sent to your Twitter account and published. And then, again, when it is set up correctly, that Tweet will also appear as an update on your LinkedIn profile.

You take one action and get 3 powerful traffic results.

Alexa.com is a site that ranks traffic online. The lower the number (closest to one) the better. For example, Google is ranked number one.Twitter is 9th and LinkedIn is 16th. That’s getting in front of where the traffic is going by getting your information on 2 of the top ranked sites in the world!

How to do it

You’ll need a 3 different accounts, and best of all they are all free. You’ll need an account at EzineArticles, Twitter and LinkedIn. Go open those if you need to.

Now go into your EzineArticles account. Go to Profile Manager>Edit Author Bio>Twitter URL>and follow the directions to list your Twitter URL on your Expert Author Page and Authorize Access to Your Twitter Account.

Do this just once, and every time you publish a new article it will be automatically announced on Twitter.

Kinda cool, huh? But don’t stop there…

Go to your LinkedIn account. Find your name in the upper right hand corner. Click on it and go to Settings>Manage Your Twitter Settings>Add Twitter Account

Set this up just once and you have set up a beautiful traffic triangle forever. Now every time you publish a new article it will be automatically announced on your Twitter stream and on your LinkedIn stream. Just as this article will be when it is published.

via Article Marketing, Twitter and LinkedIn – The Beautiful Traffic Triangle for Waves of Daily Traffic | articlefileda.

Building a social network for your customers or clients? According to Forrester Research there are 6 different kinds of social media users.  Click the link below.  It will open in a new window.  Choose the area and age of your desired demographics and see what kind of audience you’re playing to.

http://www.forrester.com/groundswell/b2c_profile_tool/b2c

  1. Creators – Socially active people who create blogs, videos, wikis, forums, and so on.
  2. Critics – Comment on blogs, writing reviews about products or services, and responding to threads in forums.
  3. Collectors – Collectors love to find and share things on the Internet.  They collect bookmarks and submit them to social news sites.  These guys are usually dedicated to bookmarking sites such as Delicious, or submitting stories to Digg or Stumbleupon.
  4. Joiners – Interact in places like facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn or forums.  Joiners want to feel like they belong to something
  5. Spectators – Love to sit back and watch.  They are avid blog readers and most likely have a feed reader. They also read reviews and come to a conclusion based on those reviews.  A spectator is someone you will always have in your audience in some form.
  6. Inactives – These folks are on the net but are not yet participating in social media.

If social media interests you and you want to build a marketing plan using social media you might want to check out the following book.  “Social Media Marketing – Strategies for Engaging in Facebook, Twitter & Other Social Media” by Liana “Li” Evans.