• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Marjorie Clayman’s Writing PortfolioMarjorie Clayman’s Writing Portfolio

Professional writing profile of Marjorie Clayman

  • About Me
  • Content Categories
    • Articles/Papers
    • Social Media and Blogs
    • Video Scripts and Concepts
    • Print Ads and Collateral
  • Contact Me

Archives for March 2011

The case for Facebook Places

by TommyWalker

This is post number six in a series of posts from Online Marketing Strategist Tommy Walker. If you have questions, leave a comment here or visit with Tommy on Twitter at@tommyismyname.

Are you a brick and mortar business owner?

Have you claimed your Place on Facebook yet?

If you answered no, I would like to take the next few minutes to give you a crash course education on one of the biggest free opportunities that you’re missing out on.

Mobile Facebook users are doing the heavy lifting for you.

There are plenty of reasons why you should be on Facebook, but if you’re a local business owner, Facebook Places should be number one.

Why?

People are already using it. Where 50% of Facebook’s users are mobile, a good percentage of them are creating and checking themselves and their friends into places in the real world.

Most businesses have to do virtually nothing to get themselves started.

When a user “checks-in” to your location, a story is automatically uploaded to theirs and their friend’s walls saying they at your business. If your Place isn’t already in Facebook’s database, most users will create the place just so they can check in. A check in gives your business that social proof that is so vital in today’s economy (more on that in a minute)

Most users will “Like” the Place Pages they check into, giving that  Place Page permission publish updates to that person’s News Feed. If you know how to stand out in the News Feed, you will have a great chance at getting people to interact with you not just online, but in your store as well. Note: You can only publish to fans News Feed if the Place Page is linked to your Fan Page. Fortunately claiming a Place Page takes about 5 minutes.

If you haven’t claimed your Place Page, you’re neglecting interaction with your most valuable customers- people “checking in” are physically at your location and promoting you to their friends. Don’t you think they might want to hear from you on a regular basis?

Facebook Places makes Deal delivery brainless.

If you aren’t familiar with Facebook Deals, Deals is an extension of Places that allows businesses to reward people for “checking in”, offering a number of “reward” systems, such as a loyalty program that acts as a virtual punch card, leaving a punch every time a user “checks in” and issuing a reward (such as a coupon) by the company. No punch cards to remember, just check in and that’s it.

This sort of hyper local, mobile experience can do some really incredible things for a business. Not only is the user getting rewarded for “checking in” but that checkin also gets published to their friends News Feed, offering that social proof that businesses are so desperately looking for in today’s online landscape.

Are you missing the two critical pieces of marketing?

If you’re running a brick and mortar business and you’re not rewarding people for “checking in” you’re easily missing two critical pieces of your marketing, customer acquisition and customer retention.

The acquisition comes from the ever increasingly important “Social proof” element we talked about earlier. Your customer’s friends seeing “John Smith checked in at (insert your business here)” lets people know that your business is a cool place to spend money. That check in acts as a vote and shows others that your business has value and it’s ok to spend money with you. Where people have become so acutely aware of their financial situations, that check in could mean the difference between gaining a new customer or experiencing another missed opportunity.

Likewise rewarding people for “checking in” gives people a reason to come back and ultimately continue to promoting your business. By saying “buy 5 crepes, get 1 half off” you’re giving a customer a reason to come back. You’re also further solidifying your chances of getting those 5 “check ins”, which should not be taken lightly.

The average user on Facebook has 180 friends, a good majority of them being people they went to high school with and other people whom they are locally connected. By rewarding that person to “check in” multiple times, you’re significantly increasing your chances of being seen by those 180 new people.

And that’s only by encouraging only 1 person to check in.

So what are you waiting for?

Stop neglecting your customers, and start rewarding those who willingly promote you.

Even if you don’t link your Place Page to your Fan Page, you can still reward people for doing something they’re already doing by hooking them up with Deals.

As a side note, By using Deals you’re also saving a couple of trees and a few orders of punch cards.

Look at you making people happy and saving the Earth and stuff.

Filed Under: Marketing Talk

Coins or Content?

by Margie Clayman

Film critic David Edelstein made some pretty interesting comments about the Oscars this year. Most interesting was that Edelstein said that he knew Natalie Portman would win the Oscar. What Edelstein basically insinuated is that Portman, like Christian Bale and many other actors and actresses, are starting to act, seemingly, specifically so they can win the Oscar. Throughout Black Swan, for example, Edelstein says that you never forget that you are watching Natalie Portman act. You never forget how much weight she lost for the part. You never disappear into the story. In other words, Edeslstein is hypothesizing that actors are acting for the rewards, not because they find acting rewarding.

The Blog Rewards Program

It’s easy to fall into a similar trap in the blogosphere. You start out thinking, “Good grief, if I could just get 1 comment on a post telling me that what I’m saying is worthwhile, I’d be happy.” The gift of sharing your thoughts is enough to make you smile. But eventually, you start noticing that really powerful blog posts get the blogger certain things. You maybe get noticed by a really influential person. Maybe you get asked to write a book. Maybe you get retweeted so much that Twitter breaks. Suddenly, blogging as a craft, as an opportunity, doesn’t mean as much.

Are you blogging for rewards instead of for the love of it?

Have you noticed any of the following patterns developing?

• You think of a topic that would be helpful to your readers, but you don’t feel it’ll get a lot of attention, so you opt not to write it

• You scrap a lot of posts you write because you don’t feel like they’ll get retweeted much

• You write about topics you don’t know a whole lot about because they’re getting a lot of attention

• You get depressed about a post if it doesn’t get a whole lot of attention, even if the comments that you get are great

If these thought processes are running through your mind, you are paradoxically headed for less success, not more.

Rewards are not the answer

Just like acting, really good blogging hides the muppet strings, if you will. Readers will forget that you are in this competitive marketplace, that you are trying to do this that and the other thing. They just know that you are a good, reliable resource who gives them information that helps make THEM better.

If you start blogging to get more attention or whatever else you consider a potential reward, you will be dismayed at the results you’ll start to see. Here is a small taste of what can happen in this scenario.

• Your readers will quickly realize that they are no longer your priority

• Your readers will also realize that as a resource, your information is playing second fiddle to tools that get you noticed

• You will never be content (and that’s only a partially intended play on words). A post that does well will just make you want to write a post that does better.

• Positive feedback from your community will diminish in meaning as you become more hungry for your rewards

• You’ll put so much pressure on yourself that blogging will no longer be rewarding on any level and you’ll burn out

There is just one reward to shoot for

As a blogger, you have a job. That is to be a valuable resource for your community, and even for the community at large. If people are asking you questions about a topic and they are expecting you to write about it, you have an obligation to do so, even if you know that the topic is not the kind of thing that gets a lot of attention.

Here’s something that will really mess with your head. The more you blog for your community, the more rewards you will collect, and the less you will care about those random achievements. When it’s about your community, their happiness, their comments about how helpful you are, are all you need.

Which way do you want to go?

So what will it be? Will you, like our modern actors today, put aside your art and blatantly shoot for the gold statue? Or will you keep the spotlight on the community of people who read your blog and who depend on you for good, solid information? Which path are you on right now?

Let’s talk about it.

Image by Claudio Jule. http://www.sxc.hu/profile/kwod

Filed Under: Marketing Talk

Create a Unique Customer Experience Using Foursquare

by Margie Clayman

This great contribution is by my friend Raul Colon. Raúl J. Colón is Principal of CIMA IT Solutions Corp. , an IT Consulting & Social Marketing Firm, which helps small-to-medium sized organizations in implementing adequate business processes to meet their IT and Social Marketing business goals. I sometimes also call him Kitchen Table Talks “pet” 🙂 Follow him on Twitter @rj_c!

FourSquare

I have been using foursquare for a good amount of time. Foursquare offers badges for different levels of customers which initially got me interested in playing along (How can Geo-Location Services Help Your Business?. Although the past few months I have been working more from home, while I am traveling I am consistently checking-in on foursquare at most locations.

I have seen how people have caught up with using foursquare but it surprises me that more venues have not moved as quickly in creating an experience via foursquare.

Not as many businesses sign up for an offer on foursquare but the few that do sometimes don’t create the experience their customers who are foursquare users are looking for. I remember reading @chrisbrogan’s “GO MAP YOURSELF” and understanding the difference in feeling like the real mayor of the venue or just being the foursquare virtual mayor.

Why offer your customers a foursquare experience?

Foursquare offers major visibility because every check in automatically reaches the network of the person that checked in. You might be able to put your Business name in front of hundreds or thousands with very little effort.

It offers various and flexible ways of promoting your services, products, and mainly your locations. You can create virtual loyalty cards, give a bonus or upgrade on an item, boost traffic on slow days, create an incentive for 1st time visitors, create an incentive for repeat visitors, give out something unique, or even motivate people to bring their friends along.

How to enhance or create the experience

Educating your staff about the offers is a great start. I have had various experiences in which I have checked in for a foursquare offer at a few restaurants and I get a confused look from the waitress not understanding they have a foursquare offer. Educating your staff about offers is the most important part of the experience.

Greet those who checked in on your location and thank them for checking in. For example if you are in the restaurant industry have your hostess or manager verify who has checked in and take a look at their avatars or pictures have them greet them.

Remind them and apply the offer before they ask. This will create a completely different experience from having to tell the waitress or haggle with the manager to get was offered. If you are not able to identify the person via their avatar go ahead and send them a tweet thanking them for there visit and reminding them about the offer.

Know your foursquare mayor. ;[I have been the mayor of many venues in which I have not been recognized being a repeat customer and holding the title of Mayor on Foursquare.] Adding the foursquare part meant I was promoting their business to my community and networks on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter.  Once you have done your research, make sure you give him some extra perks and teach your staff to recognize whom that person is. For those customers who don’t use foursquare, make sure you also show gratitude with offers for supporting and promoting your business.

No matter what tools you use online or offline. If your business is actively promoting foursquare make sure they are really making your foursquare mayor feel like he is royalty. Creating a unique experience for those that support your business should be in every business plan.

Any other suggestions on creating or enhancing your customer’s experience using Foursquare?

Filed Under: Marketing Talk

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 6
  • Go to page 7
  • Go to page 8

Footer

marjorie.clayman@gmail.com

   

Margie Clayman © 2023