Posts Tagged ‘Social Media FTW’


Talking Social Media FTW on 207

Saturday, September 24th, 2011

Social media is a critical tool for most businesses and non-profits. Here in Maine we have the Social Media FTW conference each fall and this is a clip from 207 where we talk about who should go and what to expect.

Leading up to the 3rd annual Social Media FTW (For the Win) Fall Conference, I had an opportunity to put on my “tech guru” hat one more time and go on 207, the evening news program that runs on our local NBC affiliates here in Maine, and talk about the upcoming conference.

Kathleen Shannon interviewed me about the history of FTW, who was speaking, and who should go.

My big takeaways from the interview were, “that’s a really nice shirt,” and “I should shop at Marshall’s more often.” You can watch the interview at the WCSH 6 website or down below.

Rich Brooks
Social Media FTW


Learn YouTube Marketing at Social Media FTW

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

Social Media FTWGrow your online visibility and build your business with online video. Rich Brooks leads a workshop in YouTube marketing techniques at this year’s Social Media FTW Fall Conference.

YouTube is the 2nd most popular search engine in the world. Videos from YouTube (and other video sharing sites) appear in the first page of search results. Videos entertain, educate and engage your audience. They attract prospects on YouTube, on your blog, and on your website.

So why aren’t you making more of them?!?

In my session at this year’s Social Media “For The Win” conference I’ll be talking all about making and marketing online videos to grow your business. Here’s a little promotional video I made about it:

My online video workshop is only one of many great sessions we’ve got planned. Mike Volpe of Hubspot and Saul Colt of Freshbooks will be our two keynotes, and you can see a full list of speakers at the site.

Here’s the 411 on the social media conference:

Date: Thursday, 9.22.2011
Time: 9a – 5p (registration begins at 8a, networking bar at 5p)
Place: Abromson Center, USM Campus, Portland, Maine (map & directions)
Cost: $149 (save $25 w/discount code flyte)

Every year this conference sells out, so don’t wait! Get your tickets now!

Rich Brooks
YouTube Famous


Facebook Marketing: Make Your Facebook Page Photos More Social

Monday, October 4th, 2010

A Full House at #ftw2010 - Sam Cousins

A great way to increase and engage your Facebook fan base is to post photos of an event and invite your fans to tag themselves and their friends.

That was the plan for our Social Media FTW Conference. We had two photographers at the event; Angela Coulombe and Sam Cousins. Angela posted a gallery of FTW 2010 photos under her personal account (and made it public) while Sam gave me a thumb drive of photos to upload it to the Social Media FTW Fan Page at Facebook.

As I uploaded Sam’s photos to an album on the FTW fan page I tagged a bunch of friends, then posted the album and asked our fans and Twitter followers to tag themselves.

Unfortunately most of my tags didn’t “stick” and apparently no one could tag themselves or their friends.

Oops.

Sam reached out to me and explained a few things that I’d like to pass on:

Standing Room Only - Angela Coulombe

Don’t Tag While Uploading. If you’re uploading a lot of photos (like I was) and tagging friends and writing captions on the first page…don’t. Facebook is pretty inconsistent and a wee bit flaky when it comes to uploading all those photos at once. Better to upload the photos first then go back and do your tagging (and captions) after the fact.

Letting Fans Tag Is Not the Default. It’s probably just easier to let Sam explain this:

Here’s the fix.

http://facebook.com/pages/edit/app_settings.php?id=REPLACEME&aid=2305272732

The “REPLACEME” is the ID for your page. (look for the PID or ID in one of the links)

That’ll take you to the page which allows you to a) let fans add photos to your fan album and b) tag photos.

As far as I can tell, there is no link anywhere else that takes you to that page.

As hard as it is to believe that there isn’t a link that goes to that page, I just spent 15 fruitless minutes looking for it. If you know an easier way to get there, please let us know!

In any case, by tagging your photos and allowing fans to fill in the blanks with more tagging, you can encourage activity at your page and draw attention to your event and business or organization.

Rich Brooks
Starved for Attention


Social Media Reading for Retail Shops

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

Crazy week here at flyte new media while we get ready for tomorrow’s Social Media FTW Fall Conference. Rich (me!) is speaking and flyte is a sponsor. Be sure to swing by our booth and say “howdy!” if you’re going.

Since I’m a little distracted with all the planning, and falling down on my blogging duties, why don’t you check out a recent blog post I did for Social Media Examiner called How to Use Facebook and Twitter to Drive Traffic to Your Retail Shop. And don’t be shy with that retweet button!

Hope to be back to blogging by Friday. Enjoy the rest of your week, and I hope to see you all at Social Media FTW tomorrow! (#ftw2010)

Rich Brooks
Burning the Candle Right Up the Middle


Social Media For Businesses & Non-Profits

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

This is the freeze frame? Sig


Tuesday night, WCSH, southern Maine’s NBC affiliate, ran this story on social media and businesses and interviewed me for it.

I fear for the day when Channel 6 goes completely HD. If my hair looks that bad again I may take to wearing a Red Sox cap for all future interviews. Heck, even a Yankees hat would have been an improvement. (No, not really.)

After the segment they also mentioned the upcoming Social Media FTW conference which will be held on 9/22/2010 in Portland. Goodwill NNE, which is featured with me in this segment, will be represented on our Social Media Success Stories Panel…local businesses not in the business of social media, but succeed wildly anyway.

With a week to go we’ve sold over 330 tickets (as I write this) and I’m feeling pretty good that we’re going to sell out. So, what are you waiting for? Get your ticket now!

If you happened to see the segment, or checked out the story at the WCSH website, you may have noticed that they said that flyte new media will be putting on the event. Clarification: flyte is a sponsor. Social Media FTW as an organization is putting on the event. FTW is made up of Chrystie Corns, Jaica Kinsman & li’l ol me.

Rich Brooks
NOT Ready for My Close Up


Advanced Facebook for Business – #ftw2010

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

If your business is already on Facebook but you’re looking to take it to the next level you may want to attend Jaica Kinsman’s session on Facebook 201: Advanced Facebook for Business at the upcoming Social Media FTW Conference. In this brief interview she tells you what to expect, and what not to expect in her session.

Rich Brooks
Social Media FTW


Marketing & Advertising Tips: The Placement of Flyers

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Yesterday, as Colin from Market Street Eats and I were discussing owning the sales process (see yesterday’s post), we were putting up a new poster for Social Media FTW, the upcoming social media conference we’re putting on up here in Maine.

Colin taped up the poster on the back of the Dasani cooler that faces people as they walk in and when they’re sitting down. While doing this we were  patting each other on the back for being able to see opportunities that other people miss (again, see yesterday’s post.) After five to ten minutes of this activity, and after the poster had been in place for a few minutes I got ready to go. It was only then that I looked at the entire back of the Dasani cooler:

Yes, it appears that there was already a poster for Social Media FTW on the back of the cooler, and neither Colin nor I had seen it.

1st Lesson Learned: Put your marketing and advertising where people will see it. We understand why giant conglomerates spend all that money to get shelf space at eye level. We stood in front of the poster for over five minutes, STARING at the back of that cooler, and neither of us saw the poster at knee level.

2nd Lesson Learned: Don’t break your arm patting yourself on the back.

Rich Brooks
Missing the Obvious


How to Turn Your Blog Into a Lead Generation Machine

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Rich Brooks [hey, that's me!] will be one of the presenters at the Social Media FTW Fall Conference on 9/22/2010. He’ll be presenting on Advanced Blogging Techniques. Last year’s conference sold out, so be sure to register now!

To generate online leads, you need a steady stream of new, qualified prospects to your web site. These days, that means strong search engine visibility coupled with an active presence in social media.

And there’s no better tool to help you in both categories than your business blog. But like any tool, it doesn’t work by itself, it just amplifies your own efforts. Here’s how to maximize your efforts to increase your online visibility, drive more qualified traffic to your site, and convert that traffic into leads for your sales team.

  1. Spend time crafting a keyword-rich title for each blog post. Every blog post creates a new web page; each web page is another opportunity to rank well for one of your targeted keyword phrases in Google and other search engines. Your blog post title becomes your web page title, and titles are the biggest variable in the search engine algorithm, so don’t short-change yourself here. Make sure your best keyword phrases appear in the first few words in the title for maximum exposure.
  2. Keep those titles compelling. Leverage the “sharing power” of social media by creating compelling titles. People will often “Like” or retweet a blog post based solely on the title, even without reading it first! Although the tool may be tongue-in-cheek, check out the Link Bait Generator for ideas on how to create a compelling title.
  3. Blog for your audience: your prospects and customers. Too many business blogs appear to be where press releases go to die. Although there’s a place in an active blog for company news, for most businesses that’s not what will attract customers. Instead, keep the focus of your blog on your customers’ pain points. Every time you get an email or phone inquiry asking you for your expert advice, turn it into a blog post. If one person had that question, probably a dozen, a hundred or a thousand other people had the same question. Answer it before your competition does. Eighty to ninety percent of your blog posts should be addressing problems that your prospects face on a daily basis.
  4. Blog regularly. Don’t fall into the “I don’t have time to blog” trap. Blogging is marketing, and every business needs to make time to market their services. Get up an hour earlier, stay up an hour later, don’t watch “Project Runway” one week (unless of course you have a fashion blog. Then watch it twice.) You should really be blogging at least twice a week, three times when you’re just getting started.
  5. Reach new audiences through guest blogging. If you have the opportunity to blog at someone else’s blog, you are immediately introduced to a new audience. If you get another blogger to contribute to your blog, very often they will promote the post to their faithful readers, who will check out your blog. In either case, the cross-promotion is valuable to help you reach an audience who may never have heard of you otherwise.
  6. Actively market your blog. If a blog is such a great marketing tool, then it should market itself, right? Well, it needs a little help from you, especially at the beginning. Leverage your social media presence by promoting your new blog posts through tweets and status updates. Use tools like Pingoat to push your post to news aggregators. Use social bookmarking & news tools like Digg, Delicious and StumbleUpon as appropriate. Leave (intelligent) comments at related blogs and make sure your name links back to your blog post.
  7. Funnel blog traffic to your web site. Once you start attracting new traffic to your blog, it’s time to convert those visitors into prospects. You can do this through keyword-rich links to areas of your web site where you offer more information, or directly to a lead generation form. Consider offering a free download from your blog (at flyte’s blog we offer “The 11 Biggest Mistakes Small Business Bloggers Make”) that requires an email registration for collecting leads.

Now it’s your turn: what techniques do you use on your blog that generate leads and get people to start doing business with you? Share your ideas in the comment field below…and who knows, maybe some later readers will follow your link back to your blog!

Rich Brooks
Social Media FTW Co-Founder


Early Bird Discounts for Social Media FTW

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Early last year I got together with my friends Chrystie and Jaica and we decided to put on a social media conference. We had all recently spoken on social media topics and the rooms were filled with business people who were curious about what social media marketing was all about.

So we created Social Media FTW (for the win), an organization that would put on conferences about how businesses and non-profits could use social media to reach new audiences, build awareness and create deeper connections with customers and stakeholders.

Last year we put on the first annual Social Media FTW Fall Conference. It was a half-day affair with dozens of speakers and it sold out fast. In fact, we had a waiting list of over 50 people. People showed up without a ticket that day and just asked to be let in if someone didn’t show. There were sitings of some people outside holding up one or two fingers with hand made “I NEED A MIRACLE” signs. (Unconfirmed.)

This year, FTW’s going to be even bigger. We’ve got a full day of workshops, more networking and great speakers (who we’ll be announcing soon.) Based on feedback from last year we’re including beginner and advanced tracks on many topics. The networking bar is back and we’ll be serving you lunch as well.

To help keep ticket prices down we’ve got some great sponsors involved, including Constant Contact, FairPoint, JobsinME.com, flyte new media and others we’ll be announcing soon. In fact, the whole day, including the workshops, lunch, snacks and networking is only $149!

As good as that price is, we have a limited number of Early Bird Discount tickets for only $99! However, when they run out–or by August 6th, whichever comes first–they’re gone for good. Here’s our good friend Mark Nutting to explain more:

Unfortunately, there was some misunderstanding about who was going to be the spokesman for the ad.

So don’t hesitate, reserve your early bird ticket now.

Rich Brooks
Social Media FTW Co-Founder