Welcome to the Visual Web

12 Sep

Unless you’ve been unplugged over the last year, you’ve surely seen the explosion in visual content and visually-based social networks to share that content on. This explosion is called the Visual Web. It’s been called one of the top trends of 2012 by ReadWriteWeb, highlighted by Fast Company and discussed here and here. But where did it come from and how can you use it to blow your business goals out of the water? (Ok, I know there’s something wildly absurd about writing an article about the Visual Web so you can stop snickering now.)

When the iPhone was introduced in 2007, it revolutionized photography. Before smart phones people would take pictures of life events—babies, weddings, graduations, trips, etc. Remember the “Kodak Moment”? The iPhone, essentially a hand-held computer that can easily be carried anywhere, suddenly allowed you to take pictures of and instantly share even the most mundane details of your life never considered worth documenting before—your conference badge, your dog lying around the house, strangers’ kids playing in a fountain, what you look like at 7am, the equipment at the gym you work out on, (all of these came from photos shared by my friends on Facebook—I can’t make this stuff up). With the iPhone and the other mobile phones that followed, photography was no longer a keepsake or memento. Photography was constantly being created and shared. It’s become disposable.

The iPhone not only revolutionized the kinds of photos people took, it also revolutionized how people shared those photos. With mobile apps you’re able to take pictures and instantly share them with your friends, fans and followers and random people you connected with online but now regret. While networks like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube existed before the iPhone, visually-based social network apps have exploded over the last several years. There are numerous camera apps, including Hipstamatic and Instagram, both photo-sharing networks with digital filters that let you turn the photos you took today into relics from the ‘70s. There’s no bigger sign of the growing importance of these visual-networks to online engagement than Facebook’s acquisition of Instagram for one.billion.dollars. In addition to YouTube, video sharing networks include SocialCam and Viddy, the Twitter of video networks. Tumblr is a blog platform based on images. Pinterest is an image- and video-sharing site based on bulletin board-like collections. Pinterest’s explosive growth made it the fastest site in history to break through the 10 million unique visitor mark according to comScore. It is now the third largest social network in the U.S.

While mobile phones led to the proliferation of visually-based apps, the Visual Web exploded because people are drawn to visual content. On Facebook, the network approaching mass media status, Dan Zarrella has found that photos perform best for likes, comments, and shares as compared to text, video, and links. Pinterest has generated more referral traffic for businesses than Google+, YouTube, and LinkedIn combined says Shareaholic. And videos are just as powerful.  According to MarketingSherpa, viewers spend 100% more time on pages with videos on them. Why are we so attracted to images? Our brains are naturally hard-wired to process visual information.

It turns that that though we’ve spend all this time writing blog posts, composing 140 character tweets and writing thought leadership pieces like this one, we’ve been paddling upstream. People’s brains don’t like words. 3M Corporation and Zabisco found that 90% of information transmitted to the brain is visual, and visuals are processed 60,000X faster in the brain than text.. Think about that the next time you work on your content calendar.

OK, so images are more powerful that words. How can you use that knowledge to create powerful social marketing strategies? Visual content should play a crucial role in any plan to shape the online conversations around the types of products and services you sell. If you can’t resonate with audiences, your message will fall flat. And that’s the beauty of visual content. It’s inherently architected to be consumed and shared. But how do you use it effectively?

One area with tremendous promise is reporting. What do your analytics reports look like? Wait, let me guess. Lots of numbers, maybe some charts. But do they tell clients a story? Do you present information in a way that highlights what is important, what your client need to know to make business decisions? And I’m not talking about those putting lipstick on a pig infographics that just slap some imagery around numbers. I’m talking about crafting a story about performance and using images to tell that story. Instead of a bar chart representing a particular metric that some arcane blog told you was important to track, use color, size and scale to instantly communicate key information that drives business decisions.

So the next time your team sits down together to plan the next phase of your social strategy, think visually. Think about how your messages can be translated into photos, videos, and infographics. Figure out what visual networks make sense for your company or organization based on your goals and who you’re trying to reach. Explore how you can incorporate visual communication into other aspects of your business like presentations and reporting.  The Visual Web is here. Now get your nose out of this thought leadership piece and start figuring out how to leverage it.

What the U.S. Department of the Treasury needs to know about brand consistency

22 Jul
U.S. Department of the Treasury homepage

U.S. Department of the Treasury homepage

U.S. Department of the Treasury interior page

U.S. Department of the Treasury interior page

I recently attended a fantastic event hosted by 85Broads, White & Case Women’s Initiative, and Ms. JD featuring the inspiring Laura Liswood.  Afterwards, as I networked and chatted with other women there, I met two women from the U.S. Department of the Treasury.  We talked for a bit and then performed the ritual business card exchange. As I took their cards, I noticed that even though they worked for the exact same office in the same government agency, the color, fonts and layouts of their cards were very different. In fact, the women didn’t even realize the difference existed until they saw each other’s cards.

And it gets worse. Take a look at the Treasury website and you’ll find multiple logos, inconsistent navigation and page layouts, not to mention how dated the site looks overall. (For comparison, check out the consistent, clean and audience-focused design of one of Treasury’s bureaus, the Office of Thrift Supervision.)

The mismatched marketing creates the impression that the U.S. Department of the Treasury is an unorganized agency that doesn’t mind the details. Now, I’m not suggesting that the Treasury’s poor branding is related to the economic death spiral we are just now pulling out of, but the lack of consistency does make it difficult to cultivate the image of stability and trustworthiness they need right now.

To build a strong brand, it is essential to have a coherent identity. Every touchpoint with your audience—from your email signature to the design of your office space—should reinforce your unique brand value and create a unified image of your organization. Consistency allows you to:

1. Speak with one voice
2. Project a unified image
3. Generate trust and goodwill
4. Own a market position
5. Gain mindshare

In the coming weeks I’ll talk more about how you can leverage brand consistency into a memorable brand experience and brand conversations that generate excitement about your brand and drive business.

In the meantime, Treasury, if you’re listening, contact me. I’d love to help.

Do you struggle with brand consistency or have tips to share? Tell me about it.

How the Influencer Project taught me to stop caring about influence

14 Jul
The Influencer Project

The Influencer Project

Last week I attended the shortest marketing conference ever: The Influencer Project. The virtual event brought together 60 digital innovators and asked them to speak for 60 seconds about increasing your influence online. Speakers included some of the top thought leaders in digital media today. Here are some that I was excited to hear from:

Brian Solis, author of Engage!
Guy Kawasaki, author and co-founder of Alltop.com
Mike Volpe, vice president at HubSpot
Ann Handley, chief content officer of MarketingProfs
John Jantsch, author of Duct Tape Marketing book and blog

Attending the Influencer Project seemed like a no-brainer: 60 phenomenal speakers that will help me become more influential online: that’s what everyone wants right? But as I listened to each speaker share their insights, I began to question the value of influence. Influence suggests exerting power over people and that really misses the point of new media. Instead of influence, what the speakers were really talking about was making a positive impact by building valuable and meaningful relationships.

So many organizations cite the number of fans, connections or followers they have on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter as an indicator of influence. They speak with pride about their automated tweets and ghost personas. But relationships can’t be automated. If digital media has taught us anything it is that, no matter the medium, it is all about people, not the technology. Technology just provides new, exciting ways to connect with one another. Claiming you have influence based on an abstract number of followers is like judging the strength of your network by the number of business cards you’ve collected. What matters is not the number but the quality of your connections and how you can help them succeed.Here are three tips from the Influencer Project to help you make a difference—and just possibly effect significant change—by building strong, meaningful relationships.

1. Embrace your passion

People are drawn to others that are enthusiastic and have a story to tell. Embrace your passion. Figure out what drives you and commit to it. Share your ideas freely. Be authentic and true to yourself. Don’t try to pass yourself off as something you’re not. People can tell the difference.

2. Contribute in a meaningful way
You’re passionate. You have something to say, but don’t make it all about you. Show your value. Give other people a reason to care about what you care about. New media shouldn’t be a platform for navel gazing but a forum where you can help others achieve their goals. Understand your audience, their motivations and suggest ways for them to overcome their challenges. Be an advocate. One of my favorite recommendations from the Influencer Project was to find gifted up and comers that need help getting launched and support their efforts.

3. Reach out
I’m sure we’ve all heard clients who think that social media is free, easy and fast and run across snake oil salesmen who try to convince you that they can get you tens of thousands of followers overnight. Needless to say they’re wrong. Offline or online, building relationships is hard work. It takes a significant investment of time and effort. No one else can do it for you. It requires that you take it seriously and commit to it. Identify the people you want to connect with. Comment on their blog. Engage them on twitter, forums and other online communities. Grow your network by connecting with professionals in other areas.

These tips provide the basics for an action plan to connect and make a difference online. What have you done to help someone else succeed?

Make your event more social with Twitter

30 Jun
Wendy Nemitz

Cupcake Queen Wendy Nemitz of Ingenuity Marketing Group

Last week I was immersed in the Association for Accounting Marketing’s (AAM) national conference here in DC. The event offered three days of inspiring speakersthought provoking presentations and networking with the sharpest minds in accounting marketing, and, significantly, constant tweets about the event.

During the conference I used Twitter to find out what was going on in sessions I missed, connect with new friends, make plans, provide commentary, joke around, share observations and, most importantly, connect.

In essence, twitter amplified my conference experience.

Here are some easy ways to use twitter to get the most out of any event.

1. Follow the hashtag
Hashtags allow you to follow conversations on Twitter in real time. A hastag uses the hash symbol followed by a topic or event name. Find out what the event hashtag is and follow the conversations. You’ll get updates on the event, see who’s attending, the sessions they’re excited about and plan meetups or tweetups.

And, if you’re really enthusiastic, you can post your tweets about the event to your site or blog. Tweetboard lets you add a widget of your tweets in threaded discussions that can be commented on by visitors.

2. Tweet at the event
The amazing thing about tweeting at an event is that you’ll feel like a rockstar. People retweet your tweets, send you messages, talk about you in their tweets. I have to admit I was a power tweeter at the AAM conference, and people I’d never met before were asking me about my tweets. How cool is that?! But this five seconds of fame is minor compared to the value your tweets provide. By tweeting, you’re able to share the key points of a session people may have missed, alert them to a spontaneous get together, or, in the case of AAM, let them know that the escalators are not grounded. Thanks @nadenlean!

Tweeting also contributes to the overall archive of the event. Want to make sure you didn’t miss any important tweets? Use Twapper Keeper. It allows you to create an instant pdf of all the tweets that used the conference hastag.

3. Make that connection
Sometimes the end of conferences feel like the last day of summer camp. You had a great time, but you wonder if you’ll ever see any of these people again. Grow the relationships you made by staying in touch with people online after the conference. Follow them on Twitter. You can use BlastFollow to create a list of anyone who used the conference hastag. Connect on LinkedIn. And, if the connection was as much social as it was business, friend them on Facebook.

How do you build connections at events? Are there any other tools to recommend?


Bookmark and Share

Lessons from Tony Hsieh at DCWEEK

11 Jun
Tony Hsieh speaking at DCWEEK

Tony Hsieh speaking at DCWEEK

I went to hear Tony Hsieh, CEO of Zappos, as part of the amazing 10 day-long extravaganza that was Digital Capital Week. Tony talked about how important the brand is to a company’s overall success. If you don’t have a clear sense of your unique value and your people aren’t committed to delivering to that promise, everything about your business will suffer. Tony saw that first hand with the first company he started. As the company grew, it lost its shared sense of purpose and morale, internal cohesiveness and profits all declined.

With Zappos, Tony set out to create a company where the brand drove everything. At Zappos, the employees live and breathe their promise to deliver superior client service, to deliver happiness. Here are some ways you can learn from Zappo’s brand values to strengthen your own brand.

Value #1: Deliver WOW Through Service
To be remarkable, you can’t be average. You have to stand out to get the attention of people bombarded with messages in an age of information overload. Commit to delivering WOW by consistently exceeding expectations, and people will remember you and sing your praises to others.

Value #3: Create Fun and A Little Weirdness
Be yourself. Identify what makes you special and embrace that distinction.

Value #6: Build Open and Honest Relationships With Communication
Buying anything, a product or a service, is emotional. To be successful you have to build relationships internally among staff and externally with your clients and customers.

How do you keep your brand strong?

Bookmark and Share