Greg Swan

Archive for October, 2008|Monthly archive page

David Meerman Scott at Social Media Breakfast MSP

In Social Media on October 31, 2008 at 2:14 pm

toprankblog via Flickr

CC: toprankblog via Flickr


This morning’s eighth Social Media Breakfast MSP was at Deluxe Corporation, which apparently has something to do with checks. I had no idea, but most of the room seemed to understand. I wish they had better explained that part.

They had a nice office, although too few plug-ins and not enough coffee.

First off, congrats to Rick Mahn and the entire MSP community for growing SMB MSP into the monster that it is. I can still remember the first SMB at Key’s Cafe with like 10 of us ACTUALLY SITTING DOWN TO EAT BREAKFAST.

And now here we are eight months later with free books, Fortune 1000 companies opening their doors to us, nametags (!?!) and 100 attendees. Holy crap. This thing is a beast.

David Meerman Scott presented today. If you didn’t know already, this guy is one of the founding fathers of marketing 2.0. Here’s his Wikipedia bio:

Scott’s ideology “the new rules of marketing & PR” is that marketing and public relations is vastly different on the Web than in mainstream media. He says that the “old rules” of mainstream media (which he asserts do not work on the Web) are about “controlling a message” and the only ways to get the message into the public domain using mainstream media is to buy expensive advertising or beg the media to write about you. He says that the rules of marketing and PR on the Web are completely different. Instead of buying or begging your way in, Scott says anybody can “publish their way in” using the tools of social media such as, blogs, podcasts, online news releases, online video, viral marketing, and online media.

So yeah, he’s kind of a big deal. He speaks to 20,000 people a year, has multiple books and definitely knows his stuff.

toprankblog via Flickr

CC: toprankblog via Flickr

His new book, World Wide Rave, talks about ways companies can create triggers to cause raves and engage their consumers.

David is a great speaker and while he evangelizes a lot of what I share with clients every day, he sure does say it better.

For example:”On the Web, you are what you publish…and what other people publish about you.”

David opened his presentation showing how one person in a stadium can cause a wave, which I think is a great meta example for clients.

toprankblog via Flickr

CC: toprankblog via Flickr

He talked about his Word of Mouse theory, including Cadbury Gorilla YouTube and remixes:

He discussed some old rules and new rules, including Buy Your Way Into Advertising and Beg your way in with PR (old rules) compared to Publish your way in directly (new rule) and offered to sell sticker space on his laptop for $2k/year.

Another old rule is Measurement via sales leads and press clips. On the web, says David, these leads are silly and counterproductive because they cause you to do the wrong thing.

David Meerman Scott’s Rules of the Rave:
1.    Nobody cares about your problem (except you)
2.    No coercion required.
3.    Lose control
4.    Put down roots
5.    Creat triggers that encourage people to share
6.    Point the world to your (virtual) doorstep

David says he shares all of these theories and then clients say,  “Hang on, but we’re a ________________” so he shows them the case study of B2B toilet company CWS with their “Say No to Dirt” YouTube video boasting 2 million views:

Since I’m a music blogger, I quickly connected with his “Why was the Grateful Dead popular?” analogy. Because they let their audiences record their concerts and trade tapes, consumers were so interested and fascinated by the music they wanted to come and experience it themselves (well, that and the drugs but he didn’t really get into that). TGD became the most popular touring band in history because they lost control over their music.

Other examples worth highlighting:

  • Who says dentists can only market the traditional, boring way? Local dentist campaign, Healthy Mouth, Healthy Sex, which was released as a free ebook and quickly spread like crazy. It gave consumers (and media) a unique angle to pass along to their influence groups.
  • NY Islanders Hockey Team have the NYI Blog Box and treat bloggers the same as MSM. They had 12 bloggers accepted for last season; 20 for this season. They get  the best seats for every game in press section, access to interview coaches and players, media sheets and are enabled to break stories.
  • Create Triggers that encourage people to share, for example, the “Cities I’ve Visited” Facebook Application from TripAdvisor, which more than 5 million people have installed. It took TA two days to make this application.
  • “Everything I’ve been talking about is search engine marketing. If you have a crappy site and do SEO, it’s just a slightly less crappy site.”
  • Point the world to your virtual doorstep — once you’ve engaged with our online advocates and created all of these social media programs, be sure they can point somewhere online where you can keep the discussion going and provide value.
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Them peppers is spicy

In Food on October 30, 2008 at 2:13 pm

We had a hot pepper tasting at work today thanks to my colleague Erik, who grows them in his basement.

This is Erik. You’ll note he wears gloves to chop up the peppers — yet then you put them in your mouth!

Erik grows Dorset Nagas, the hottest peppers in the world.

He also brought milk. And bread. And tears.

I spoke at MCAD and launched Perfect Porridge Indy Band Marketing Tips

In Speaking Engagements on October 28, 2008 at 2:09 pm

Last night I spoke to Matt Wilson’s MCAD class about music/band marketing. They were a super smart group of students working on projects for STOOK!, The Invincible Kids, Dance Band, Military Special and Kristoff Krane.

My approach to marketing a band is akin to consumer product roll-out and positioning strategies, and I spent a lot of time listening and responding to their specific local band challenges and opportunities using insight from both my day job and music blog.

In honor of the class, I’m going to start a series of indy band tips over at PerfectPorridge.com.

Read the first post here.

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Greg the Plumber

In Home Projects on October 27, 2008 at 1:37 pm

The base around the toilet in our 120 year-old house has been leaking. We just moved in 7 weeks ago and there is only one bathroom, so it was on the medium priority list.

This weekend we pulled up the carpet the previous owners had installed (carpet in the bathroom is wrong, btw) and immediately saw we had a very bad problem.

Rotted floorboards, black mold, a hole in the floor — all the makings of an Extreme Home Makeover.

So we took apart the toilet and gutted the bathroom floor — cut it completely out. Then I sprayed mold killer all over, let it dry, sprayed again, then polyurethaned it really well.

Then we installed a new floor made of plywood (also with multiple coats of polyurethane). In the next couple of weeks we’re going to be completely refinishing our original hardwood floors, so we’ll be sanding this flat before putting down new tile.

And then I completely gutted all the moving pieces, screws and seals in the toilet and taught myself how to put it together. Yes!

Just the first of many projects to come in our century-old house. But you can’t argue it doesn’t have character.

Stampede in Downtown Dallas

In From the Road on October 23, 2008 at 10:47 am

I was in Dallas this week for work. In addition to filing a TP Report over at The Deets, I witnessed this outside the office…

To promote Texas Stampede Week in November, an actual cattle drive took place in downtown Dallas, Texas yesterday.

There were 100 head of longhorn cattle herded by a team of real-live, 7 foot tall cowboys (see below).

Being from Iowa, I’ve seen plenty of cattle up close, but I can’t recall ever being this close to longhorns. Those horns are nasty! I had to be careful taking pictures, because their horns came through the fence pretty quickly.

Here’s a shot of the cattle drive from the 16th floor of the Comerica Bank Tower:

There were clowns following behind on manure duty. Now there’s a job.

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Perfect Porridge in the MN Daily

In In the News on October 17, 2008 at 9:21 am

My music blog, Perfect Porridge, was included as one of three examples in the MN Daily’s story, The new American Dream booming across bandwidth.

Much local music has become an entirely different beast thanks to the Internet. Blogs, MySpace accounts and Pitchfork-like online reviewers inform and power a new generation of music lovers. And, for what it’s worth, it seems to be the newest incarnation of the American Dream for the local music scene…

If you can focus through the maelstrom of information, you can discover blogs like “Perfect Porridge,” which offer erratic singular downloads of Matisyahu or even an “adventure-rock band” from Ohio.

Read the whole thing here.

Libertarian Bob Barr to participate in tonight’s debate thru social media

In Social Media on October 15, 2008 at 4:37 pm

I watched Barr do this during the first debate, and it was fascinating…

Starting this evening at 9:00 PM EDT, live and concurrent with the broadcast of the closed debate between the Republican and Democratic nominees, you will be able to see where Bob differs with his opponents.  Using digital video recording technology, Bob’s responses to the moderator’s questions will be spliced in in real time for viewing at the campaign’s website at www.bobbarr2008.com/counterdebate Bob will be broadcasting from Newport News, Virginia on the campus of Christopher Newport University before a live audience.

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Gary extolls virtues of social media ROI

In Social Media on October 12, 2008 at 3:23 pm

Paraphrased summary:
Given the economy, Radio, Magazines, Newspaper, TV still require massive amounts of advertising dollars to reach mass audiences but can’t actually measure ROI. Companies would be far better off going to niche social media sites where you can track long tail payoff and invest in Google SEM.

Dear legacy advertising model, the clock is ticking…
[via]

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@fakegregswan is born

In Social Media on October 12, 2008 at 10:48 am

Birthday Office

It was my birthday earlier this week. I was out for a family funeral.

It goes without saying carrying a casket on your birthday is surreal and not exactly on par with blowing out candles, so I can’t tell you how much it means to come back to work to find this! More office photos here.

Birthday Office

In addition, my coworkers set up a @fakegregswan Twitter account:

In celebration of Greg Swan’s birthday (but mostly his absence), we thought it would be great to give all of us a little something, to finally stick it to the man, get much needed transparency and blow off some steam along the way. With an overwhelming amount of pleasure I introduce you to @FakeGregSwan twitter account.

Not only do I *not* control what @fakegregswan says, I’m at a loss for words. Judging by some of the tweets, there must be some loving, pent-up Greg Swan angst in the office…

  • God I love Nickelback. I mean I really, really love them. They are the pinnacle of music. Theres God and then there’s Chad Kroger in my book
  • on my way to jazzercise class sporting my sweet new leapord-print leotard, rocking out to the new pussycat dolls album on my pink ipod nano
  • what can I get quoted in this week?

They even advertised it around the office:
Birthday Office

And the gift keeps giving, Thursday night I was at the second WCCO Bloginar, where they had a projector set up to show event-related tweets. And this showed up on the big screen…

  • fakegregswan: @wccobloginar WHO’S UP FOR ANOTHER BLOGGER BODYSHOT??!!

Just then, the internet crashed and the projector froze on this tweet for nearly 5 full minutes (as I faced puzzled looks from around the room).

Thanks again, guys! :)

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Twin Cities Media Alliance Fall Media Forum is tomorrow

In citizen journalism on October 3, 2008 at 9:43 pm

I’m going tomorrow. Shoot me a DM if you’re there, and we haven’t met yet (@perfectporridge).

From the TC Daily Planet:

“Tools for Democracy, Strategies for Change” is the theme of the Twin Cities Media Alliance’s 4th Annual Fall Media Forum, tomorrow, Oct. 4, at the downtown Minneapolis Public Library.

Featured speakers include Minnesota Secretary of State Mark Ritchie, on how citizens can use new media as tools for participation in electoral politics; Robyne Robinson on how to use mainstream media, and Amalia Anderson of the Main Street Project, on organizing for media reform and media justice.

Afternoon workshop topics will include media justice and media reform; digital skills training, and a talking circle for journalists, participants and bystanders who witnessed the RNC protests.

This event is open to the public and free of charge, but donations are welcome.

Online preregistration is now closed, but you may register onsite on the day of the forum.

I’m particularly interested to hear their perspective on the Steve Jobs/CNN iReport citizen journalism debacle from today and any lasting impact given the criticism coming from the MSM and SEC.

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