Greg Swan

Archive for August, 2009|Monthly archive page

Social Studies: Favre’s comeback breaks via Twitter

In Social Media, Social Studies on August 20, 2009 at 9:35 am

As posted on Social Studies on August 18:

Michael Jackson’s funeral notice may have generated a CNN Breaking News Alert today, but the big news for us Minnesotans captured four of the top 10 trending spots on Twitter:

Brett Favre, Farve, Vikings and WCCO.

But why was local CBS affiliate WCCO-TV trending right along with the news of Brett Favre signing with the Minnesota Vikings?

Because they broke the story — via Twitter.

Via David Brauer at MinnPost:

Reporter Mark Rosen, preparing for a Hawaiian vacation set to begin Wednesday, got a call around 8:30 a.m. from a team poohbah. Fifty minutes later, the tweet heard round the world — well, at least the sports world — went out via @wccobreaking:

“A high-level source with the Minnesota Vikings tells WCCO’s Mark Rosen that QB Brett Favre is expected to sign with the team Tuesday.”

The station’s willingness to sit on a story that would quadruple its web traffic — producing a spike only exceeded by the 35W bridge collapse — reflects oft-derided mainstream newsroom values.

While the concept of news breaking online is nothing new, it’s exciting — and indicative of the changing landscape — to watch legacy journalists embrace new media channels, such as Twitter, for their breaking news reports.

The content mainstream news institutions gather, confirm and report is just as valuable today as ever before, but the distribution model must change to keep pace with technology, generational habits and the ever-quickening pace of the news cycle.

For example, although I don’t often watch local television news, I do subscribe to all available local TV station Twitter feeds, frequent their Web sites and read reporter blogs. I learned of Favre’s new Vikings deal via Twitter, sent it to a friend via e-mail, who posted it to his Facebook page.

News is news, in spite of the delivery format.

Now bring on the Super Bowl tweets!

Leave your comments on the Social Studies blog.

Armchair Marketing: Chaska’s Top 10 Lost PGA Opportunities

In Armchair Marketing, Chaska on August 13, 2009 at 7:09 am

Fresh on the heels of earning the No. 20 spot on Money’s 2009 list of America’s Best Places to Live, Chaska is hosting the 2009 PGA Championship at Hazeltine National Golf Club this week. This is an international news-making event, and the community has been gearing up for months and months to prepare.

Articles in our truly superb local resource, the Chaska Herald, have detailed preparations of the course, the history of Hazeltine, how the communities of Chaska, Chanhassen and Jonathan were impacted by the development, and even a story on the snazzy new PGA banners hung on lamp posts throughout downtown Chaska.

From all outward appearances, Chaska has been gearing up for an event to remember.

So it’s safe to say I was quite surprised to read this quote from a Herald article titled “Golf fever strikes – but will it pay off for Chaska?”:

“Our experience says there’s no large economic impact,” said Chaska City Administrator Matt Podhradsky. “Other than setting foot at the golf course, [attendees] don’t really set foot in town.”

This is the most depressing local government official statement I’ve read all year. In my opinion the shuttle stop argument for not even trying to bring a fraction of golf dollars into town lies in laziness on behalf of the local government, the Chamber and downtown business community.

Canterbury Park in nearby Shakopee is the official shuttle stop, and this article quotes Shakopee’s Chamber, hoteliers and restauranteurs about how they plan to count their money. Canterbury Park is only eight miles from downtown Chaska — closer than many people drive to buy milk and bread.

Maybe it’s my one-year-Chaskan-resident-naivete here, but if Chaska is the place for golf this week AND thousands of out-of-towners are descending on a plot of land four miles from downtown, this sure seems like a tremendous opportunity for the local business community to pull together and make a reason for them to spend money in our town.

Shuttle stop be damned, we went to the trouble of printing and hanging lamp post banners, but nobody thought to dangle a carrot big enough to get folks to stop by our picturesque community, grab a bite to eat, poke through our shops and take in the ambiance that makes this place #20 best place to live?

Maybe these conversations were had, and I’m conveniently misinformed. It just seems someone dropped the ball, and I think it deserves a penalty stroke.

What would I have done? For starters…

Chaska

  1. Host a PGA-themed community event at Chaska City Square this weekend, complete with local bands, charity putting contests, kids’ games, celebrity speakers, etc. Perhaps more realistic than pulling off a new event, consider pushing back River City Days three weeks to the PGA week.
  2. Chaska

  3. In conjunction with the community event and activities, coordinate progressive dinners at our stellar local restaurants (or at a very minimum, discounts for PGA passholders), including Spice Up, Mi Casa, Chaska My Love, China Pagoda and Cy’s with a dessert stop at It’s Just Perfect.
  4. Chaska

  5. In conjunction with the community event and dinners, organize a “Drink with the Pros” campaign, featuring a bar crawl with stops at Pauly’s, Kelley’s, Cy’s, Dolce Vita and the American Legion. PGA caddies drink free all night every night.
  6. Chaska

  7. In conjunction with the community event, dinners and bar crawls, host a golf film festival at Rex Movie Theater, including family golf favorites like “Caddyshack.”
  8. Chaska

  9. During the events and PGA tour week, actually compel our downtown businesses to be OPEN — I’m talking to you Linda’s Cellar, Vintage Cottage, Mixed Company, Mill House Gallery and Lillian’s — so folks passing through town can come inside and buy things. The antique shops could have spent the past few months seeking out golf-related treasures to help draw folks in.
  10. Chaska

  11. In conjunction with the community event, boutique and restaurant promotion, organize a “Golf Widows” day event, featuring a partnership between Tonia’s Salon, Hair & Beyond, M. Elizabeth and Forever Nails and Spa for spa treatments, manicures, pedicures or makeovers.
  12. Chaska

  13. Paint temporary golf cart lanes throughout downtown Chaska and encourage PGA attendees and Chaska residents to take to the streets in their carts for the week of the event. Set up community recharging stations, have Chaska High School cheerleaders or band members host “cart washes” and organize the first-ever Chaska Golf Cart Olympics. The national and local media attention around this stunt would be worth it alone.
  14. Chaska

  15. Invite local churches to collaborate and host an ecumenical service in the City Square for out of town Christians, followed by a “Bless the Clubs” event similar to Guardian Angels’ upcoming St. Francis of Assisi’s Bless the Pets Day in October.
  16. Chaska

  17. Empower our fantastically delicious local pizza joints, Pizza N Pasta and Sarpino’s to have the busiest delivery nights of the week by hosting PGA specials, set up pizza stations at shuttle stops, deliver in-town pies via golf cart, etc.
  18. Chaska

  19. During the community event and PGA week, turn those empty downtown storefronts into an asset. For example, Sundance Film Festival each year, downtown Park City residents rent their stores and apartment lofts to sponsors hosting corporate events, lounges and private concerts. Why send PGA sponsors to Minneapolis hotels to host influencer events when we have food, lodging and space only four miles from the course?
  20. Easier said than done, I know. But as a downtown resident and daytime marketer, it kills me to see the PGA tour all but ignored because of small parking lot mentality.

    Last night Mi Casa set out a sandwich board reading something like “PGA Fans Welcome” and listing bar prices, and around 8 p.m. watched a group of 15 people walk down my back alley toward it. It’s good to see Mi Casa trying, and it was apparently working.

    I’m not a big Field of Dreams guy, but sometimes “if you market, they will come.”

Announcing the debut of Cheeseburger Monster Trucks, the band

In Cheeseburger Monster Trucks on August 12, 2009 at 11:26 pm

cheeseburgerMy son and I have been messing around with our large collection of musical instruments for some time now. I’ve only recently started recording our collaborations and definitely plan to share the genius that results from our combined talents.

I’m going to call our band Cheeseburger Monster Trucks, as this is Grant’s favorite thing to shout when having his picture taken, and it just seems fitting.

Our first track is called “Turtles.” I hope you like it

DOWNLOAD:
Cheeseburger Monster Trucks : “Turtles” (mp4)

If you dig our vibe, be sure to add us as a friend on MySpace.

How Greg Spent his time in 2008

In Me Being Stupid on August 5, 2009 at 4:20 pm

The New York Times has a fascinating interactive graphic showing how thousands of Americans over age 15 spent their time in 2008.

Everyone:
howgroupsspendtheirday_sm

Just Greg:
howgroupsspendtheirday_greg_sm

Social Studies: 5 New Social Media Things I’m Excited About

In Marketing Tips, Social Media, Social Studies on August 3, 2009 at 2:39 pm

My new post on Social Studies today…5 New Social Media Things I’m Excited About

1. Foursquare
It’s like Twitter, except not only do you care where your friends are AT THIS VERY MINUTE, you all earn points for going to those places. I signed up for Foursquare long ago, but just like Twitter, it takes a good base of friends actively using it be fun. Local businesses would be smart to set up Foursquare nights/tours for their early adopter patrons. Are you the mayor of anything yet?

2. Google Voice
I finally got my beta invitation and locked in my Google Voice number with a personalized XXX-XXX-GREG, which I’m very excited about. You can set it up to forward all calls to cell, home and work phones or filter some folks to one or the other. Online voicemail with transcripts is fun, and I was able to install an app on my smart phone to make calls without using minutes and send SMS without using my plan’s allotted texts. The set up was very intuitive, and I’m excited about the future of this technology and integration with the Google cloud suite.

3. Stuff in 3D
I’ve seen some microsites and business cards utilize Web cam to 3D technology, but last week I discovered Best Buy (client) using the advancement in human brainpower to put graphics on their ads that turn into 3D images when placed before your Web cam. The technology is here, and it’s time to experiment. Can you imagine a tiny Trent Reznor playing a 3D show on your laptop?

4. TweetYourSenator
President O’s PAC is still spending all of those tiny donations leftover from the election, and this time he’s made it simple to “Tweet Your Senator” about healthcare reform. As if our elected representatives’ aides didn’t already have their hands full sending form reply letters and deleting voicemails from constituents, now they have incoming tweets to ignore. But wait! There are a surprisingly large number of congressional members on Twitter, and I’m excited to see ways to harness the burgeoning interest in tweeting.

5. Twibbon
If you were an avid Twitter user in the summer of 2008, you’ll remember Ze Frank’s Color Wars, where users chose a team, tweaked their avatar to show their team spirit and participated in challenges just like summer camp. I was on the red team and remember agonizing over my avatar in Windows Paint trying to get it just right. These days people pimp their avatars for more genuine reasons (green avatars for Iran, Stellan, etc.). And thanks to Twibbon, it’s easier than ever to tweak your avatar with a cause or image overlay. Don’t see a cause that resonates with you? Make your own. Very cool.

–Greg Swan

Please leave comments over at Social Studies.

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