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media partners

I’m back from my week in the Bahama’s, which was relaxing and busy all at once. I posted some pictures early last week, and to get a feel for the experience you should read Tami’s post on her blog.

One of the big breaks was from producing content: between this blog and another blog I use for some other writing, I’m creating 15 or so pieces of content every week. When I took a break last week, I realized that is a fairly time-consuming sideline, and it was nice to let my mind stretch out and ruminate over things.

Here are four quick thoughts from my idle musing this week:

“Leads” is a term that is too loosely used and too loosely understood by media providers, lead generators and marketers. I’m watching the markets that I’m involved in get cluttered with misidentified leads. The result is troubling: a focus that should reduce cost and increase profits for marketers seems to be doing exactly the opposite. A “leads” arms race by the media partners will only clutter the market. My takeaway: I want to run a business that drives good leads and helps our customers make them better leads.

Media continues to be a powerful way to connect audience, information and merchants. The organic nature of media has changed, however. Media used to be associated with a format. Now, media is associated with an experience. Or something. What I do know is that media is more fluid and alive than ever.

The business cycle today reminds me of going to play basketball in a cold gym in the middle of the winter. Every ball was slick and flat. The secret was picking out the ball that was tight enough to have kept its air, and to keep dribbling with it until it warmed up and expanded. Voila, you had a ball that you could shoot and rebound. That’s the key: you can’t rebound a ball without air. In this business cycle, we can’t get discouraged that the ball feels flat…we’ve got to keep playing with it and warming it up.

And finally, experience is what differentiates products and services. Do you know what your experience is? Do you know what you want your experience to be? And do you know how to tell when your experience has gone sour? Those are questions I want to be able to answer.

So, I’m back to the blog. I did think to myself that I should scale back my posting schedule, but I suspect that is just a fleeting thought. I enjoy it too much.

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Brian Solis wrote a reflective post today that strayed from his typical forward-looking perspective to reflect on how the term “Social Media” has morphed to encompass all kinds of web activity.

He harkens back to a definition of social media that was developed by a group of leading thinkers a couple of years ago. That definition focused in its short version on the idea of conversation.

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The landscape has changed markedly since Solis’ group developed their seminal definition. What is striking is the degree to which the concept of conversation has remained at the core of many people’s definition of social media and infiltrated the idea of how marketing should develop in the space.

When you take the perspective that social media is a set of tools then conversation becomes one part of a broad spectrum of different opportunities. New media companies have created vibrant communities by integrating different parts of the social media toolkit. Facebook, for instance, is a media property that combines different social media tools, such as photo uploading, video uploading, commenting, e-mail, messaging and micro-blogging, into a common interface that is easy for consumers to use.

I often compare AOL and Facebook, because the initial purpose of both services was to aggregate communities and create connections. AOL drove its product development towards a focus on content publishing from media partners; Facebook drove its development towards building easy-to-use content creation and networking tools.

For a business that wants to intersect with consumers online in a dynamic fashion, incorporating social media tools into the marketing process is essential. Each of the tools requires a different set of skills and processes. Starting a conversation with the market is ONE of the things that social media tools make possible. But even without engaging in conversations, businesses can bolster their marketing by changing the way that they create and distribute marketing content, turning the marketing dialogue into an ongoing series of information exchanges rather than one-time marketing events.

Social media tools have moved Content to the forefront of any marketing process. These tools have changed how Media has to think about the process for building content and audience. Solis is on target when he talks about social media become the essence of new media. It’s even bigger than that: Social media tools have the potential to force change in the structure and process of organizations on the scale that the introduction of the personal computer did.

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A look into leads: Where they come from and what happens when they get here

May 18, 2009

The science of leads turns out to be just a part of the art of marketing

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