Greg Swan

Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

Punxsutawney Phil on Twitter: a lost opportunity?

In digital reputation management, Social Media on February 2, 2009 at 1:21 pm

groundhog_phil

First thing this morning I heard (via Twitter, mind you) that Punxsutawney Phil had not seen his shadow. I realized today was Groundhog Day, and that the annual mock-holiday had been entirely eclipsed by the Super Bowl this year. I hadn’t heard one peep about Groundhog Day last week, and was struck by the missed opportunity for Phil to leverage social media to get the word out about his big day.

GroundHog.org, The Official Site of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club, has no social media tools — no countdown widget, no blog, no live stream, nothing.

Phil does have a Facebook Fan Page, but other than a handful of user photos and comments, it’s been dormant for over a year. What a lost opportunity!

So I went ahead and set Phil up with a Twitter account. @PunxsutawneyPhil was one character too long, so I went for @groundhogphil.

Here are a handful of his tweets today:

An analysis of weather data and yearly groundhog predictions reveals I’m way smarter than Lilburn’s Gen. Beauregard Lee http://is.gd/i66E
Matt Lauer keeps calling me a prairie dog, and it’s pissing me off.
Punxsutawney Phil is the only true weather forecasting groundhog. The others are just impostors. It’s like lip syncing at the Super Bowl.
Aaauuhh… my head is pounding from the party last night! Go Steelers! I think I set a car on fire last night… Steelers!! Woo!!
The economy sucks, I’m going back in my hole until you humans figure it out
Now if only the guy with the freaky mustache would put me back in my cage.
I saw my shadow!

After sending a few tweets, I discovered over in Lilburn, GA, Phil’s competition, Gen. Beauregard Lee, has a Twitter account (@gameranch) with 14 updates and 47 followers.

Coincidentally, Phil tweeted this:

I wish I’d thought of this last week. Instead, I’m a bit late to the party, but was able to quickly brandjack Punxsutawney Phil. Yet another example of why it’s critical companies, brands and individuals proactively stake out their online reputation.

NOTE: If you represent Punxsutawney Phil and/or Punxsutawney Groundhog Club, I will glady turn over the Twitter account to you. I’m just having some fun, so please shoot me a note.

Digital Reputation Management, Minnesota Interactive Marketing Assn (MIMA) Event, Jan 21, 2009

In MIMA, Social Media, Speaking Engagements on January 22, 2009 at 5:25 pm
photo by @tbrunelle

photo by @tbrunelle

On Wednesday, I had the profound pleasure of moderating a Minnesota Interactive Marketing Association (MIMA) event on the topic Digital Reputation Management, a topic that is a core focus of my company (and me personally) in 2009.

A Weber Shandwick proprietary analysis revealed that over three-quarters (79 percent) of the world’s number-one most admired companies lost their crowns over the past five years in their respective industries.

Reputation loss is also on the rise. Nearly 9 out of 10 business executives participating in our Safeguarding Reputation™ survey agree that susceptibility to reputation damage is a growing threat.

Similarly, a sizable 84 percent of global senior executives surveyed by the Economist Intelligence Unit reported that reputation risk increased significantly over the past five years. When executives were asked to choose among 13 risk types, reputation risk emerged as the most significant threat to global corporate business.

As company, brand and product reputations fluctuate and/or deteriorate worldwide, communicators need to proactively engage reputation radar systems to identify, track and respond to approaching reputation threats, as well as find ways to locate and empower brand advocates.

This is definitely a topic which our interactive marketing community needs to be active (especially proactive) in discussing, exploring and collaborating. What a great panel topic!

greg_mima02

Our star-studded panel constsited of Tammy Lee Stanoch, VP Corporate Communications for Delta/NWA, Lela Phommasouvanh, Senior Consultant, Search Marketing for FindLaw, a Thomson Reuters Business, and Steve Bendt, Social Technology Activist for Best Buy, Inc.

More than 250 attendees absorbed tips about tracking buzz, making the business case to leadership and the imperative “Set Up a Google Alert for your name and your clients’ names” mantras. If you missed the event, you can stream the archive here.

Gems from the discussion:

  • Be authentic
  • Be transparent
  • Be cautious, but fearless
  • Don’t be stupid
  • Don’t be unethical
  • Trust your employees and your customers
  • Realize you don’t have control, but put forth measures to proactively inoculate detractors and engage advocates

The panel put together a list of suggested reading links on del.icio.us here, and also mentioned the following resources to research, check out, use or peruse:

  • Best Buy Connect (BBY Employee Aggregator)
  • Blue Shirt Nation (BBY’s Internal Social Network)
  • Spy (can listen in on the social media conversations you’re interested in)
  • Twitter Search (Twitter search tool that includes RSS feeds)
  • RipOff Report (central place to enter complaints about companies and individuals who are ripping people off)
  • Yelp (User Reviews and Recommendations of Top Restaurants, Shopping, Nightlife, Entertainment, Services and More)
  • Radian6 (tools for real-time social media monitoring and analysis designed primarily for PR and Ad agencies)
  • Trakur (online reputation monitoring tool designed to assist you in tracking what is said about you on the internet)
  • FlyerTalk (the world’s most popular frequent flyer community)
  • LinkedIn (a networking tool that helps you discover inside connections to recommended job candidates, industry experts and business partners.)
  • ZoomInfo (a Web-based service that extracts information about people and companies from millions of published resources)
  • Spock (the world’s leading people search engine)
  • Cluetrain Manifesto (suggestion from audience that everyone should read it, and I concur)
  • Addictomatic (suggestion from the audience)

I also recommend:

If you have others to share, please include them in the comments.

UPDATE:

Steve Bendt has a recap post here.

Tim Brunelle has a recap post here.

Hello Viking has a recap post here.

Five things about social media I’d be thankful to see change

In Social Media on December 6, 2008 at 1:55 am
Used w/o permission from Hugh McLeod's Social Media Strategist Series (www.gapingvoid.com)

Used w/o permission from Hugh McLeod's Social Media Strategist Series (www.gapingvoid.com)

So the week before and during the Thanksgiving Holiday I was on overload with family stuff, house stuff, work stuff, music blog stuff — you know, stuff.

But like anyone who uses the words “social media strategist” AND “egoist” in his bio, you would think I would pay closer attention to my Google Alerts.

Looks like Mr. Mike Keliher tagged me on a pretty compelling topic, “Five things about social media you’d be thankful to see change. That is, things you don’t like or could be better.”

I know it’s past the day we all eat turkey and forget to be thankful, but I’m going for it. And I’m feeling cynical and snarky, so you can tell I’m a blogger.

#1 Ageism: I was taught, and more or less still believe, old age equals wisdom. Have a major life decision to make? Ask your parents or grandparents. Naively think Obama will change the world in his first 100 days? Ask someone who has lived through more than 10 Presidential elections…you get the idea. So when I was 15, I knew lots of older people who drove cars. They taught us in driver’s education classes that the more experience you had driving a car, the better you would be. My great-grandparents even still drove their car at the time. They must’ve been great drivers, right? But what happens when you’re the older person — the Baby Boomer or Traditionalist — and you’re being exposed to new theories and technologies that make you anxious? You either fear it, dismiss it or seek out information to understand it. The continuing misperception that young people are wasting time or not investing in worthwhile activities through social media is getting old (pun intended) and something I would be thankful to see change.

With that comes #2, the Continuing Education Gap: When did marketers start thinking they could stop learning once they mastered the 30 second spot and how to write a press release? Humans evolve. Technology evolves. Let’s all agree that nothing is constant and see if we can stay on the bleeding edge more than once a decade. Attending a Webinar once a month or listening to a panel of “experts” share their opinions on the evolving marketing industry is a great start. But it’s a start. You didn’t get that college degree by showing up to class once. I would be thankful to see the education gap narrow.

#3 Twitter evangelizing: I’ve been a Twitter power user for so long, I’m utterly exhausted at explaining what Twitter is, why it’s essential, it’s potential impact and how it’s the only reason I have friends in Minneapolis (true, btw). I’ve proselytized the Twitter doctrine to the skeptical, recently converted and fellow brethren, and more recently, have been hoping for it’s rivals to make a stand for the next generation of mobile networking. I heart Twitter more than I can stand, would pay them for reliable service and praise the portal to anyone who asks. However, I can’t wait for it to die so the next big thing will rise in its place. I would be thankful for it to hurry up and happen.

#4 Blogging software: Supposedly Blogger, WordPress and Typepad have made blogging so easy that anyone can do it! Well, they can if they either want a crappy looking templated blog or know CSS, HTML and other programming that I don’t know enough to even write about. I would be thankful if a company made free blogging software that was fully customizable without knowing a speck of code, allows for widgets, custom headers and doesn’t require me to know how to install/update it on a server. PP.com is on WordPress 2.0 because I have no idea how to install the new version on my server. GS.net is on WordPress.com and doesn’t let me customize it all all. Perhaps I am just stupid and this is easy. In that case, I would be thankful to see that change, as well.

#5 Slow internet: I live in Chaska, MN – home of one of the state’s first municipal wi-fi networks, and it’s slow as hell. But you know what? Even my cable internet is too slow. How are we supposed to fully transition to a fully integrated, connected, video culture if all of my neighbors and I are subject to bandwith meters that discourage us from pushing the Web to its full potential? This is like buying a Ferrari and installing a governor to ensure you never go faster than 50 mph. I would be so ever thankful to see this change.

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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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Social Media Permeates Throughout Presidential Debates

In Social Media, Social Studies on October 3, 2008 at 3:44 pm

Cross-posted from Social Studies:

The days of watching a Presidential or Vice Presidential Debate without a scroll on the bottom of the television screen is long gone. This year, CNN showed real-time results from dial testing focus groups, Bloomberg and CNBC scrolled stock tickers and Fox News featured SMS text polling and results (e.g., Text VOTE to 36288).

But that’s old news and still a one-way information flow (yawn!).

The year 2008 will be remembered as the year social media enabled anyone with an Internet connection to help add their perspective to the debates.

During the Presidential Debate last week, Libertarian Candidate Bob Barr — uninvited to the formal Obama/McCain debate — answered moderator questions and provided McBama counter-points in realtime through Mogulus. Comments were enabled on the online streaming portal, so viewers could participate and help shape the discussion.

During both the Presidential and Vice Presidential Debates, Current TV featured a bleeding-edge offering called “Hack the Debate.” With the aid of Twitter, Current integrated real-time Twitter messages (a.k.a. “tweets”) from users along the bottom of the broadcast window on Current TV. Anyone who included the word “#current” in their tweets had the chance to see their micromedia commentary aired worldwide.

Here are some video highlights from the Presidential Debate last week.

Sometimes the comments added value — “You know who I feel bad for? The “lower” class. The poor. Who is going to fight for them? It’s a shame. No one mentions them.” (@davidbadash)

And sometimes the comments provided comic relief when things were getting too serious — “The moderator might as well just say “BOOPITY DOOPITY WAKAWOOWOO” because they’re just talking about what they want, anyway” (@rightasrayne)

But with my laptop on my lap, phone at my side and television remote nearby, social media allowed me the opportunity to glean what people across the country thought of the debate question-by-question and afforded an opportunity to voice my perspective (and snarky comments) to the masses.

Social media spiced up the age-old, one-way debate format this year, and it will never be the same.

In the words of @mikethomas84, “the only winner in this debate is the internet.”

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I’m quoted in the MSP Business Journal today

In In the News, Social Media on September 26, 2008 at 9:19 pm

msp_bizjourn_sep26.JPG
Sites: not just for personal connections anymore
Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal, September 26, 2008

While many firms historically have blocked employees from signing onto sites such as Facebook at work, that’s now something some companies are beginning to rethink, said Greg Swan, digital strategist for Weber Shandwick’s interactive, social and emerging media practice in Bloomington.

“If employees are telling 100 of their friends that their job is the best job in the world, that’s good marketing,” he said.

While online social-networking sites may lead to business connections, many users say they enjoy using sites just to meet people with common interests. That approach can ultimately be the best way to find prospective job candidates or clients…

Overall, sites including Twitter and Facebook are worth using regardless of whether a connection leads to a new client.

“I’ve made more real-life friends in the Twin Cities through social networks than at professional organizations,” Swan said. “I can seek out like-minded people and build real-life relationships.”

Read it online here.

My Social Studies Posts Today

In Social Media, Social Studies on September 26, 2008 at 8:40 am

Twitter’s Election Tool (see link for post)

Blogger Outreach: The College Party Analogy (cross posted with Social Studies)

This was my second year attending BlogWorld & New Media Expo. Starting with the opening keynote on Friday, it was clear 2008 is the year marketers are formally staking their claim on social media. As more of us realize the power, permeance and influence social media has on both our clients and personal brand, the opportunities for creative, experimental, influential and fun (!) campaigns continue to present themselves.

Presented by industry guru Dave Taylor, the Executive and Entrepreneur Opening Keynote featured his “State of the Blogosphere.” As Dave traced the method of storytelling to the beginning of civilization, I appreciated his comments about bias and subjectivity – two of the biggest arguments we face regarding social media — tracing back to the first blush of communication.

As expression evolved — from Anne Frank’s diary to spray painted graffiti, blogs to social networks — Dave reminded us the future of social media is linked to the past and has its roots in basic 1:1 communication.

I have eight posts worth of takeaways to share from the conference, but I’ll start with something you can put into use today. This past weekend, Dave was first among many to talk about blogger outreach: answering the new age question, “How do I pitch bloggers?”

Most organizations (including ours) have an official blog outreach policy and plenty of expertise to share when it comes to sharing client messages with online advocates.

But the analogy Dave, Jason Falls and others were sharing – while not necessarily new or cutting-edge – will hopefully help you put your outreach responsibilities into perspective…

A best practice for engaging with your clients’ online stakeholders is for you, personally, to already have a relationship with them (yep, just like traditional PR 101). That means reading their blog, leaving comments, sending them e-mail feedback and tips when it’s not linked to a client. Because you are a valuable member of the community and the blogger (and his/her commenters) know you, they will excuse and hopefully welcome a bit of self-promotion or quick client heads-up. The best case if that you’ve knowingly added to the content and conversation at the most strategic time.

The worst case for engaging with bloggers on behalf of a client is finding yourself in a situation where you need to reach out to a blogger cold. You’ve never e-mailed the blogger, and they don’t know you from that businessman from Nigeria offering a lucrative business proposition. You’ve never left a comment on this blog and therefore have no stake or reputation in the community. The worst case is you pop in to naïvely “pitch” the blogger about something they’re not interested in and then disappear again.

The metaphor many were using at BlogWorld is a college party. You know, the kind of get-together where you may know a few people but are still on the lookout for a new friend or that special someone (wink wink, nudge nudge).

Now when you encounter a party, you walk in the door and say “Hi” to the host of the party first. You don’t immediately go up to a group of people talking in a circle, interrupt their conversation and say something like, “Hi, I’m Stingray from Giant Marketing Agency, and this is my client, Soap. Do you use Soap? Check out Soap.com.”

Instead, you walk around the room to get a feel for the party vibe. You may stand in the corner and wait for a break of tactful opportunity — your turn to introduce yourself. Eventually, you may mention where you work or what types of clients you work with, but it’s rarely the first thing you throw out there when meeting new people.

You can imagine the reaction if you walked up to a group of chatting football players and jumped into their conversation with a story about your painted bead collection. Now there will always be exceptions (Coco loves his beads and football), but I hope you can understand the metaphor.

I’ll even take it a step further. You don’t just find yourself at a party. First, you have to know about the party. You may have learned of it via a friend (word of mouth), a formal invitation (perhaps a flyer or e-mail?) or perhaps it was a listed event (calendar). You probably needed directions to get there, and you may have asked around before you showed up to research the dress code, what kinds of people will be attending (athletes? cheerleaders? A/V club?) and you might have prepared some talking points in advance to chat about.

To put it more simply, in the real world (IRL, as we geeks call it), you would do your homework before showing up somewhere you will be expected to communicate –- especially on behalf of a client.

Hopefully this metaphor better helps illustrate that social media outreach is no different than conversations at a party. A common theme at BlogWorld was the new importance of being part of the community in today’s PR.

And while the openness and variety of personalities, styles and opinions often present risks, the opportunity to face and embrace online advocate bias and subjectivity is more than worth the investment.

So get out and join the conversation (and save your beer cup for the next party).

I’m in the Star Tribune today

In In the News, Social Media on June 27, 2008 at 8:59 pm

porridge_startribune.JPG
Today was a Sunday, and I got 36 pitch e-mails. Last Friday I got 134 pitch e-mails. My average is 70-80/day.

That’s why if you’re not following me on Twitter (listen up bands, labels and PR people), then you will never have my full attention.

I first discovered Twitter’s true impact during SXSW 2007, when it was the absolute buzzword and an essential tool for connecting with other conference-goers. Julio Ojeda-Zapata at the Pioneer Press included on of my tweets in his innovative Twitter summary that April. (NOTE: I can’t the article using the Pioneer Press archives nor Google [LAME!], but luckily I archived it here).

Twitter is a great tool for you to get to know me better. I update it maybe 5-15 times a day, whereas Perfect Porridge is updated maybe twice a day. Plus, I love sharing cool new bands I’ve discovered, reporting what song a band just played at a live show and especially bitching about clueless PR people who make unethical requests. If you’re not listening, you have no idea if I’m talking about you.

You can also find out what tunes I’m really, truly interested in, and it’s no secret the handful of people/bands who do pitch me using Twitter always get a near-immediate response. I’m telling you, that e-mail box is a black hole.

Today I was quoted in the Star Tribune, Keeping it short and tweet, talking about my beloved mobile social network.

Each tweet by Greg Swan, 27, of Eden Prairie goes out to more than 800 other Twitterers who follow his posts.”Anytime I tweet I’m letting down three-quarters of my followers,” Swan said, explaining his diverse audience of friends, industry peers, and fans of his Perfect Porridge entertainment site. “When I’m talking about my son, most of those people don’t care.”

Swan maintains some privacy by not posting his photograph and by never discussing work clients. Otherwise, he’s in the Twitter mix and claims the site has made him more real friends (the kind where you meet face to face) than all other online networking sites combined.

That’s a true fact I cite often for clients of my day job.

I’ve been in the Twin Cities-area for five years and the best friends I have truly resulted from connections enabled by Twitter. The social network allows you to “sample” friendship… to try someone out; see if they’re worth investing in. If they indeed are, then you can take it a step further. Or say you just met someone at a concert or networking event. Follow their tweets and you may just find yourself standing in front of First Avenue between sets with a new best friend.

In the words of the great LeVar Burton, you don’t have to take my word for it. Follow me, and see what happens.

I urge WCCO-TV (CBS) to set up a breaking news Twitter feed, it happens

In Social Media on February 20, 2008 at 9:04 pm

Thanks to Twitter and my inability to be satisfied (there is no off position on the genius switch, people), WCCO-TV (CBS) in Minneapolis now has a breaking news Twitter feed.

WCCO reporter Jason DeRusha, whom I met via Twitter, then met in real life (once) and have continued to develop a relationship with, helped me out with some live stream info for this Metroblogging Minneapolis post, and I suggested it.

Here’s the skinny:

This morning while I was trying to line up tonight’s Good Question expert, I logged onto Twitter, where a friend had posted about breaking news, a fire in downtown Minneapolis.

He thought KARE was live streaming pictures of the fire. I pointed him to the WCCO.com livestream (we’re pretty aggressive about getting live breaking news on the Web). He then wrote this suggesting we have an emergency breaking news feed on Twitter.

Greg asked, we responded. You can follow WCCOBreaking on Twitter here.

Since then I’ve learned the man behind the new Twitter feed is John Daenzer, the new Director of New Media at WCCO, and we’re having coffee next week.

Man, I love me this social media stuff.

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