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You’ve probably read multiple blog posts, tweets and LinkedIn discussions praising the value of creating a Facebook page for your business.  You’re still in the dark as to how you can differentiate your Facebook page from the rest of the businesses in the world. An easy application called FBML can give your Facebook page a face-lift and attract some new fans.

What is FBML?  Facebook Markup Language, FBML for short, is simply HTML for Facebook.  FBML allows you to take HTML coding and insert it into the FBML application.  Facebook does its magic on the back end, and your fan page will never look the same.

Sound easy enough?

Unfortunately, you can’t just copy the coding on your website and paste it into Facebook.  You have to keep your coding within the Facebook wall size in order for your images to appear.

FBML allows your Facebook page to act as a landing page or microsite.  Using Facebook for a landing page or microsite saves you money because you don’t have to host the page on your server and don’t have to pay for a domain name.

Below are a few examples of fan pages using FBML:

Wendy’s ‘Get the Party’

SeaWorld’s Photo Adventure

Donato’s Pizza

Sunkist Soda

As you can see, your Facebook page can be customized to fit your business or product.  How will you spice up your Facebook page?

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People still question the effectiveness of eBlasts even though they subscribe to receive coupons, blog and news updates via email. An eBlast may not be working for you because the design and content are simply missing the mark.

On a daily basis, my inbox is flooded with newsletters, webinar invites, LinkedIn invitations to connect and, of course, eBlasts. Some of the eBlasts look like they were thrown together in ten minutes or less, and nine times out of ten, they are deleted.

If you’re looking to get more out of your eBlasts, here are a few tips:

Don’t promote – provide value

The biggest mistake most companies make when sending an eBlast is too much promotion.  You should be more focused on providing information your target audience will find interesting, and hopefully, learn something from.  Open the door for questions and offer advice.  You can get a good idea of what people want to know from tweets and discussions on LinkedIn. Providing your recipients with value will keep them looking forward to receiving your eBlasts, and they’ll be more likely to share the information with others.

Include social media

In addition to having your social media profile links in your eBlast, include some notable tweets or discussion excerpts to show what you and others are saying about the topic at hand.

Link to other RELEVANT sources

Although you are sending the eBlast, it doesn’t have to be all about you. See “Don’t promote, provide value” above.  In case you haven’t realized it yet, you aren’t the only source of information. Post a link, and quick summary of some articles you’ve recently read.  It doesn’t hurt or cost any extra money.  Just make sure the links you are posting are relevant to the topic of the eBlast.

Frequency matters

I recently ran an eBlast campaign for a client that had a weekly internet radio show.  The eBlast went out the last Friday of the month.  The eBlast included all the episodes for the month, sound bites from highest rated shows and best comments from the audience chat room.  The eBlast acted as a monthly recap and informed the recipients of what was to come next month. Eighty percent of the emails were opened each month, and the traffic to the client’s website dramatically increased. If the eBlast would have been sent weekly, the audience response would have been completely different.

Hire help

Doctors aren’t marketing executives and marketing execs aren’t doctors.  Hiring a marketing agency to help create an eBlast campaign will get you the results you are looking for.  Determining how to get through the clutter and come up with a creative design and layout for your eBlast isn’t easy, so why not ask for an experts help?

Yes, social media is a great marketing tool to reach large and targeted audiences, but it isn’t the only option.  You still have to get your message to those prospects or customers who work at a company that blocks social media sites and eBlasts are a great way to do just that.

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Facebook is a great medium to use for social media marketing, especially if you have a product consumers have an interest in. You can see how customers really feel about your product, create polls that people love to share, or even create a unique landing page using FMBL for your inbound marketing efforts.  But what about advertising on Facebook?

When you create a Facebook page, one of the first suggestions Facebook makes is to promote your page with an ad.  Facebook ads are good for targeting a specific audience and some companies have found that advertising on Facebook does work.

Facebook ads are subtle, off to the side and look just like a page suggestion. People click on page suggestions all the time, especially if one of their friends is a fan. But, why spend the money when you can create a fan page for free?

Just like anything in life, there are pros and cons to Facebook ads and Facebook pages.

Facebook pages are free, and any time a fan interacts with your page, it goes into their news feed for all their friends to see.  You can create a fan page in just about 20 minutes and then you’re off to recruiting fans and creating fun polls, quizzes and top five favorites to engage your fans.

The biggest problem businesses have with Facebook pages is growing their fan base and getting those fans talking to talk. Here is where creative content comes into play.  Using FBML and contests are great ways to prompt your fans to interact with your page.

It may take a while to grow your fan count, but here’s where you can really target your brand loyalists and educate those fans who are just getting familiar with your company.

Advertising on Facebook makes your fan page grow quicker.  If you have a product that will be available for a limited time, and you have created a fan page for it, then spend some money on Facebook ads to get the word out as quickly as possible.

You can target the audience you want to receive the message, but you have to remember that once you’re out of money, no more ads will be displayed and your campaign is over. If one person clicks on your ad 15 times a day, that’s 15 potential fans you missed.

Advertising on Facebook does get your message out there, but there’s a price for it. Creating a fan page and using Twitter, LinkedIn, your company blog and other social media networks you are on to recruit fans may take a little time, but it costs you nothing extra.

Is there any real benefit to advertising on Facebook?  Sure.  But, what’s it worth to you if your most important customers are getting lost in the multitudes of fans Facebook ads attract?

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Getting your boss to understand the value of social media is a difficult task.  No matter how valuable you think the relationships you have built are, if the money is not coming in, someone’s not going to be too happy.

Prospecting new business on social media networks is not easy.  If you are too forward and people sense a salesperson, your messages are more likely to be ignored. Now that TwitCatch is gaining some ground, searching for new business on Twitter may have just gotten easier.

TwitCatch allows you to search for a keyword in a specific area.  For example, if you are an owner of a shoe store in Akron, Ohio, all you have to do is search for shoes and type in Akron, OH and you’ll soon see results for all tweets containing shoes in Akron, OH.

You can select the people you want to receive your message and click send.  It’s that easy!  TwitCatch even allows you to check the performance of prior campaigns.

Sound to good to be true?  There is a catch (no pun intended).

TwitCatch does not utilize Twitter’s OAuth feature, which means you have to enter your Twitter username and password.  This is the same type of setup as the infamous “Get 1,000 Followers Today!” websites.

The first time you enter your information an automatic tweet like this, is sent from your account:

TwitCatch may be a short term answer to your social media prospecting dilemma, but don’t expect it to stay around long.  Once enough spammers catch wind of the application, Twitter will be more reluctant to approve it.

Is TwitCatch what you’ve been looking for?  Maybe.  But is tarnishing your social media reputation, and risking your valuable relationships worth a few extra dollars?  That’s for you to decide.

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Reality television programming may be regarded as lowbrow by some viewers, but for Waste Management Inc., “trash TV” has taken on a positive connotation.

An appearance by Waste Management president and COO Lawrence O’Donnell on the CBS show “Undercover Boss” has generated significant interest in the company. Since the episode ran on February 7th, hits to the trash hauler’s new customer and career Web links have skyrocketed. In the four days following the broadcast, Waste Management’s new customer link received more than triple the number of hits than the recent daily average and traffic to the company’s careers page almost doubled.

The publicity from “Undercover Boss”, which drew in 38.6 million people for the series premiere, has in turn secured media coverage for Waste Management via an appearance by O’Donnell on “The Joy Behar Show” and in an interview with network anchor Campbell Brown.

It is the emphatic way in which O’Donnell conducted himself on the show, for which he went undercover as an employee, that is largely responsible for the buzz. His heartbroken reaction to the workers’ tales of the indignities they had suffered as a result of their attempts to adhere to O’Donnell’s productivity policies elicited a warm response from the public. Viewers appreciated the fact that the COO of a company was genuinely trying to understand the plight of his employees.

Ironically, O’Donnell turned down the offer to be on “Undercover Boss” at first. His initial reaction to the idea is indicative of a relatively common consensus on reality television programming. However, the public’s feelings about this genre of television are slowly shifting, and as a result, reality TV is gradually becoming a valuable outlet for public relations efforts.

Take “America’s Next Top Model,” which began airing in 2003. Produced by former supermodel Tyra Banks, the show has been among network CW’s highest rated programming. In the early seasons (or cycles, as the producers have dubbed the seasons) of the show, the designers featured were by no means household names. Fashion industry bigwigs turned their noses up at the idea of promoting their designs on reality TV show. This element has changed drastically in recent cycles, with the fashion industry’s major players taking part in the show. Perhaps the culmination of this emerging trend was the Cycle 10 season finale, in which the two finalists walked in a Versace runway show held in fashion hot spot Rome, Italy.

The rules of promotion are changing across all venues of entertainment; the shift is not limited to social media’s increasing dominance over traditional media. Public relations, advertising, and marketing methods that were once considered taboo are now acceptable, and just about anything goes. Now is the time to take calculated risks when promoting your brand. Before ruling out an idea that seems “foolish” or “outrageous,” take a second look at the concept with an open mind. Smart risks can be very profitable for your brand – just ask Lawrence O’Donnell.

Source: http://bit.ly/dx9GTn
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