1. QR Codes: What Are They and Are They For You?

    You’ve probably heard us (and the world) mention QR codes for some time now, and usually in reference to larger companies. The quick of it is this: QR codes (“Quick Response codes”) are bar codes, but they can be read vertically and horizontally, which allows them to hold much more information. The code can be read by a dedicated QR scanner–but if you don’t walk around with one of those, you can also use an easy-to-get app on your smartphone (phew!). The code itself has an encoded web address, text, or some other extra, often QR-specific feature. It’s an off-line way to get to unique online content.

    Though QR codes have been active in Japan for over a decade, the technology has only recently reached the US and is trickling down to the small business sphere as well. So what we’ve done here is collected some articles to introduce you to QR codes, what they can do for you, and how effective they are. And of course, examples.

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    What Are They?

    In A Nutshell, What Are QR Codes. This is a very clear and concise intro to QR codes and some basic applications.

    What Is a QR Code and Why Do You Need One? A little bit of repeat here, but gives you some bulleted ideas on how QR codes are practical and to whom they might cater.

     

    Why?

    How QR Codes Can Grow Your Business. Sneak peak: Sharing, Community, Calls to action, SEO.

    5 Ways Small Business Can Use QR Codes: This article’s more “how” based and offers keen strategy–ever thought about a QR on you business card?

    Who’s really scanning QR Codes? This survey puts QR codes to the test. How many people are using QR codes? What operating systems are they using to scan? How has usage grown? In neato graphic form too!

     

    Examples

    5 Unique Uses For QR Codes. More in the “how to do it” department. None of these ideas are up in the articles above, showcasing the vast possibilities for this kind of technology. In other words, don’t count it out just yet.

    Best Buy Mood QR Codes Best Buy has done something interest and used QR codes internally for HR purposes–”how do you feel today?”. In addition, there’s a way cool video showing real time customer QR code scans for all Best Buy stores across the country.

     

    Convinced? Do it.

    QR Code Generator. This is one of many different QR generators, but try it out and tell us how it works for you.

    Finding a QR Code Generator. A review of a few generators, as well as some really crucial tips in what type of content to encode and where to throw your QR codes.

     

    The Next Generation, iQR Codes

    iQR Codes. Unfortunately, in the technology world things move at a fast pace. iQR codes have a higher data capacity, can be rectangular, and can be printed even smaller. Though currently not used for marketing purposes, the development of iQR codes (or Intelligent Quick Response) might be something to keep an eye on over the next few years.

     

     

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  2. Corpus Christi, TX – 04/26/11 – Del Mar Small Business Development Center – Web Tools for Better Business Operations: The Unsexy Side of Digital Media

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  3. What’s New With Facebook

    Friendly Friday, yall!

    With a good Texan salutation, we move on to this week’s Friday blog post, in which we cover some new stuff with Facebook. No, we won’t be covering the “shift+enter” complaints or the “memorable status updates” (Watch your words! Facebook never forgets!), but we do have some articles that should prove a tasty treat for those of you with a sixth basic taste of business. So what can Facebook do for you today? Let’s see:

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    What’s New With Facebook

    Facebook Expands Tagging to Include Comments: The same “@” sign that you’ve been using to link events, people, and pages is being expanded into virtually any place you can enter text on Facebook, which, if you’re the taggable brand, is good news for you.

    4 Facebook E-Commerce Tips for Brands: a lot of businesses use Facebook to sell directly rather than as a referral tool. If you’re doing this or this idea sounds appealing to you, here are some good tips on doing it right.

    Yes, Facebook Is A Viable Marketing Strategy For Startups: There is some concern among “the they” that Facebook is no longer– or at least will soon no longer be—fashionable or effective. Nick O’neill calls them out and argues that Facebook is still the number one marketing channel and is “practically mandatory” for online startups.

    REPORT: Facebook Like Drives $1.34 In Ticket Sales: Eventbrite recently released a study showing the dollar worth of a facebook share and a tweet in ticket sales for events, a must-read for any business hosting (or thinking of hosting) events.

    Why You Need Facebook’s Like Button On Your Site: We probably don’t need to beat you over the head with this idea for you to know its importance. But really, you should do it. The article has some resources and fully explains the awesome functionality of the “like”.

    image courtesy www.twitter.com/facebookmedia

     

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  4. SXSW recap: Marketing in the Moment

    This piece was originally a guest post on advertising blog AdPulp. AdPulp describes itself as “an online trade rag written by industry insiders.” We were pleased to contribute to a blog we’ve been reading for years. Our thanks to David Burn for reaching out.

    There was a lot of talk this year about brand journalism and brands as publishers at SXSW. As a matter of fact, I happened to unwittingly attend three panels in a row on that very topic. Imagine my surprise when attending a Core Conversation on Marketing in the Moment (my favorite variety of SXSW panel, by the way – they’re always highly engaging and contain no Power Points) to find that the speaker picking up where my last panel on Brands as Publishers had left off.

    Rob Garner, our Marketing in the Moment presenter and Vice President of Strategy at iCrossing, set the tone by saying that your brand is only as good (in the social media and content space, presumably) as what it is doing right now. Not what it plans to do in a few months, and not what it did a few months ago, but what it is doing right at this moment.

    Lack of Agility and the Channelization of Social

    The problem with enterprise brands, Garner argued, is that they are passive, as opposed to be being active and agile in their marketing. Brands take months, even years to update or redesign their website… actually, they take months or years to redesign even a portion of their website.

    Contrast this passive, slow-moving process to today’s rate of information dissemination. An idea that resonates with consumers, customers and clients can travel very quickly now. The social media space is like a digital organism. If an idea hits a nerve, it will travel. Marketers and brands are fixated on hitting as many people as possible in order to spread their message. But this isn’t necessarily the best way to do it. You can aim for one bird, and you might engage the whole flock, if your idea resonates with that first one.

    Aside from the problem of agility with big brands, there is a larger issue—channelization of social media. The evolution of social networks isn’t about a medium; it’s about society being networked at a level it never has been before. Social media marketers, interestingly enough, are guilty of “channelizing” themselves. Our bottlenecks, make it okay for big brands to do the same thing.

    Brands Are Excluded From the Conversation

    Marketing in the moment means being present and alive in the space through conversation and discussion, says Garner. Brands have not engaged in the space in a way that can be successful. They usually aren’t a part of the conversation about their brand, or even the general discussion that happens around their brand or industry (think home renovation discussions for a Home Depot or Lowe’s). Monitoring isn’t enough. It’s too late to respond when you’re just passively monitoring the social media space.

    A lot of this exclusion from conversation and discussion is actually self-imposed by the brands themselves. Legal departments, social media policies, blocking networks in the workplace, siloing social media into one department (or worse, one person) all combine to exclude brands from the network.

    Brand Advocates & Content Creation

    To achieve inclusiveness in the network, locate the spirited voices within your organization, and externally? Embrace your audience by bringing people in from the community to be your brand advocates.

    A brand’s identity is embodied in the spirit of its audience now more than ever before. Use a variety of market research methodologies to know what your target audience is searching for. You can set up forums and listen to what they are saying, do keyword research and talk to them personality. Market research is an obligation. It’s time for brands to listen and hear where people are coming from.

    People inside the organization are also a critical part of the audience brands need to reach. Your internal people are acting on behalf of your brand on a daily basis, so you need to have a place to use internal people for engagement. You need a strategy to utilize these important voices.

    Getting Swatted By Your Own Tail

    Most brands start shaking in their legal department boots at this point. “How will we control the message?” is the eye-rolling-inducing refrain we as social media marketers have heard repeatedly. The brands that think they control the message are the very ones who get swatted by their own tails. Bad business practices will be apparent in social media, and so maybe some brands are right to shake as they do.

    For the rest of us, some advice for overcoming the most common of internal roadblocks is simply to let go. Companies would do well to empower people to communicate without over-managing. You can’t talk when someone is editing your voice. You can’t have a conversation like that. Nothing gets by Zappos, for example, in the social space and that’s because their team doesn’t have a ton of obstacles to keep them from engaging with their audience. (As a matter of fact, when I tweeted this observation during the panel, a Zappos team member replied to me.)

    Need a Baby Step?

    An easy way for brands to join the conversation and be active ongoing participants, is to simply extend the things that are already publishing like news articles, and press releases out into the network. Even brands in highly regulated industries can be active participants, marketing in the moment, just by remaining factual and generous with their information.

    Marketing in the moment is about letting go of internal obligations, being personal, treating social as a network or digital organism (as opposed to another channel or medium), and participating in the conversations the audience is having, whether the brand is are at the center of them or not.

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  5. Five Things We Can Learn About Social Media From Charlie Sheen

    On its surface, it seems ridiculous. What could we possibly have to learn from a self-proclaimed cocaine addict, a possible wife abuser, and guy who waves a machete on his roof all wrapped into one?

    On a personal level, probably not much. But on a professional level, Charlie Sheen has really done something interesting with social media. And all without a Facebook page.

    Below we have one of the videos that started it all and had everyone asking, is he crazy? Has he lost it? Is he coked out? Or is he a genius?

    But after a while people stopped caring so much about what brought on this sudden outburst from the actor we’ve known so long, and started #winning, throwing a #fastball, and discovering their #tigerblood. The simple word “winning” has gone from a cool thing that might get you a few Facebook likes from friends to “Just scored the last jelly donut at work. #WINNING” and puts you in touch with the wave of millions of Charlie Sheen fans all stoked on their fortune, all part of the most twisted and accidental motivational campaign the internet’s ever seen. And even the ironists are taking part in the trend in Chuck Norris-Joke fashion, which is just as much absurd as it is peculiarly self-satisfying. Like Sheen says,

    “Admit it folks, the whole winning thing, you just feel better when you say it.”

    But how’s he doing it? First, the video went viral. But how do you sustain it? He took some cues from Conan O’Brien, creating his Team Sheen, and with a Twitter the world could get as much Charlie as their smartphone put out.

    No matter what’s behind the outing of Charlie Sheen’s new public game face–a hugely successful publicity stunt, a comedian that never was, whatever; as long as you’re #winning right?–there’s no doubt it’s been tremendously successful. So here are five things we can learn about social media from Charlie Sheen.

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    (1) Video, Video, Video.

    Here is the viral video that started it all (apologies, it wasn’t embeddable). We’re not recommending you do this–or anything else Sheen mentions in the video–with your business or with your self, but there’s something to be said for (1) standing out from your competition, (2) breaking the rules, (3) being fearless, (4) having crazy intense catch phrases rolling out of your mouth every five seconds.

    But that’s not all. Sheen also does live Ustream shows for his fans. It’s called Sheen’s Korner. Branding branding. Some of this stuff is really amazing writing, and we doubt it’s all Sheen. But after all, it is Charlie.

     

    (2) Twitter Is Powerful For Personalities

    This is the link to the official Charlie Sheen Twitter. It’ll speak for itself. But here we have a mind that millions of people want to get inside of, and Twitter is the perfect platform for that. Look at the extreme use of personality to drive people to this Twitter. And also, we’re cheating here, but another lesson—Never Understimate Humor. If people couldn’t laugh with Sheen (and remember Sheen is laughing too), they wouldn’t be following him.

    Just a few hours ago an article was published “revealing the secret” behind Charlie Sheen’s tweets. Surprise surprise, it’s not all him. But we can safely assume it’s mostly him, and he’s been using this to promote his “My Violent Torpedo of Truth/Defeat is Not An Option Show”. Want to talk ROI? Now here’s some tangible, monetary ROI.

    (3) There Are Some Important Considerations In Getting An Intern

    There’s been a big fuss recently about last week’s tweet from Charlie Sheen saying he’s looking for an intern. The particular fuss is that once people know that Sheen’s totally removed from his tweets, people will lose interest. They want the #warlock. So there’s some good discussion on what makes a good intern. Your scale of social media probably isn’t Sheen-sized, but if your business doesn’t depend solely on your personality (or even if it does), do some serious thinking about who your intern will be and how your intern will operate within your social media goals.

    (4) If People Like You, The Street Team Will Form Organically

    Not everyone is so lucky to have a last name that sounds a lot like “team”, but you can get creative. If you’ve stood out from your competitor’s in an important, bold, and assertive way, people will appreciate that and promote your distinction all on their own. Word of mouth is one thing, but if your breakfast taco is “twice the power of the normal taco”, the idea is so absurd and funny that people are likely to take it upon themselves to promote it how they can. We seem to be in an age that appreciates they hyperbolic, the exaggerated, the ridiculous. Capitalize on this and find your quirk. People will want to talk about you and promote you.

    (5) It Is, Always Has Been, and Always Will Be About People

    Sure, we can talk about online conversion and merchandising—Charlie Sheen is making big bucks off of all this. With catch phrases like “Dyin’s For Fools” and “I only know one speed–Go!”, who wouldn’t want a shirt that says that? But in the end, no one is stoked on Coca-Cola, or Disney World, or XYZ Donuts. People really follow people. So perhaps the most important lesson from all of this is, for better or worse, be a real person, be fearless, and be yourself.

    Oh and yeah, get an autotuner.


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  6. #SXSWmuffins

    You can bet Holly's Healthy Morning Muffins will make an appearance. The question is, where?

    I love to bake. It’s therapeutic when it’s been a long day, and business owners are always on the hunt for a good stress-reliever. Whenever I bake something particularly pretty, I’ll take a picture of it and post it to my Facebook album “Cookin’ With Good Lookin’” inadvertently driving my Facebook friends nuts with hunger. So when I began to joke with Alan Weinkrantz about leaving baskets of my freshly-baked muffins all over the SXSW Interactive conference, he convinced me that we were, in all seriousness, onto something.

    We are excited to announce that while all you SXSW party animals are karaoking your lungs out and rubbing elbows with Robert Scoble, the Neovia Solutions team will be cranking out a batch of made-from-scratch muffins to leave at various spots in the conference center every morning, like little geeky spring elves. That’s right. Every morning.

    Here’s the catch: We’re not going to tell you where they are until right before we drop them off at the location in the morning.

    Wanna be the first to know? Follow @neoviasolutions on Twitter, and watch the #sxswmuffins hashtag every morning between 9:30 – 10 a.m. And if you see one of our muffin-baking duo, give them a hug. Or maybe a cup of coffee. Because we’ll need it.

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  7. Get Your SXSW Fix with Neovia Solutions

    Hanging out in the Bloggers Lounge, SXSW 2010

    It’s hard to believe it’s been just one year since we made the trek to the SXSW Interactive Conference as an official company. Little did we know that we would attend one session that would forever change the direction of our burgeoning company. When we walked out of Chris Brogan & Julien Smith’s session, we knew we needed to change. We were going to give it all away. Everything we knew, everything we were good at it, we were gonna share it with anyone and everyone who would listen. And we have been ever since.

    In that vein, we’re encouraging you to watch us at SXSW this year. The premiere social media and interactive conference begins on Friday, and we’ll be there – live-blogging, tweeting, podcasting, shooting videos, and giving away muffins (more on that to come!).

    Stay tuned to us all week long via these channels for regular updates:

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  8. The Possibilities of Video Strategy

    Warm welcome, everybody. This week we’ve got some articles on the possibilities at your fingertips with video. And–a small treat.

    By now you know that video is ridiculously effective and can be easily shared throughout your social networks. People are much more likely to watch a good two minute video than to read your 5 page blog post, for instance. We’ve done some posts on video basics before, so what we have for you below are some articles that give a practical testament to the power of online video, along with the most recent ideas circulating in the video marketing world.

    If you’ve never done video or are slightly intimidated by it, you shouldn’t worry. If nothing else, use this information to make you think about your social strategies. Consider whether or not video is something you want to focus on.

    One note: So we thought it would be silly to have a post on video marketing without a video, but after searching Youtube for a quality video on the topic, we couldn’t find anything legitimate. So, we’re going with an example. And the best we could think of is, you guessed it, the new Old Spice videos. Gotta love ‘em. Video below.

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    7 Video Opportunities You May Have Missed. Have you (1) made how to’s, (2) sought the big names, (3) thought of in-video sponsorship, (4) …?

    How Video Can Increase Mobile Site Conversion. Year of mobile. Year of mobile. Year of mobile. The mobile video attention span is shorter (consider fifteen to thirty second videos), which means less time for you and more time for the viewer on your mobile app, bringing them closer to making a purchase. This and other great ideas at the link.

    4 Innovative Ways to use Web Video For small Businesses. Four cool and slightly quirky examples of people doing catchy things with few resources.

    YouTube Facts: 10 things you may not have known. From Mashable, this is mostly a fun, historical kind of article about Youtube. Of particular note is the number of tweets a second that contain Youtube video links in them.

    YouTube tops Twitter, Facebook in User Satisfaction. From MarketingProfs, we have some way cool stats showing that people are more likely to recommend Youtube than any other social network.

    Got any questions? Get at us!

    Always,

    Neovia

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  9. Corpus Christi, TX – 03/29/11 – Del Mar Small Business Development Center – Strategy First! How to Create a Social Media Strategy & Why

    Who
    Strategy First! How to Create a Social Media Strategy & Why
    When
    Tuesday, March 29, 2011
    TBD - All Ages Buy Tickets
    Where
    3209 South Staples St
    Corpus Christi, TX, USA 78411
    Other Info
    We believe strategy should come first in your social media efforts. We discuss the POST analysis process developed by Forrester Research analysts, where your target demographics live online, what business results you’d like to see come out of your social media efforts, and how to achieve them. Among the other topics we discuss are creating consistency, avoiding Bright Shiny Objective Syndrome, and crafting a marketing funnel.

    Tickets are free. Register here: http://utsa.ecenterdirect.com/ConferenceDetail.action?ID=17158.

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