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What’s the most important and tangible goal for marketers using social media? To drive web traffic, according to an ongoing benchmarking study conducted by the consulting firm MarketingSherpa.

73% of the more than 2300 respondents to the MarketingSherpa survey says they target the goal of increasing web traffic, and measure results against that goal, when they deploy social media marketing programs.

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The next three most mentioned goals are equally tangible: increasing sales revenue, improving search engine rankings and increasing lead generation.

Within the general discourse about social media, there is a lot of emphasis placed on the opportunity to open up organizations and create a new level of engagement with prospects and customers.

In our implementation of social media marketing programs, we’ve seen the potential of that activity.

Yet, the most tangible impact comes from the increase in visibility on search engines, and the direct conversion of consumers to website visitors, that accompanies the expansion of a company’s digital footprint.

The brand marketers surveyed by MarketingSherpa recognize the central role their corporate web site plays in their business strategies, and are assessing the impact of social media in terms of how well it helps to improve those strategies.

For those of us providing social media marketing programs, being able to articulate the benefit of a service against these objectives, as well as providing measurable results, will be at the crux of long-term success.

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Steve Rosenbaum did a great interview with Columbia’s Ana Seave that was published on MediaBizBloggers earlier this week.

Seave is one of the key contributors to The Curse of the Mogul, required reading for anyone in the media business who wants to dig into the critical issues facing media companies and their business models.

Seave’s thought a lot about content, cost, quality and digital. Media brands can create increased loyalty with their readers, she believes, by enriching their experience of content. A key element of that is curation, Seave explains:

I think that the actual idea of curation and aggregation and packaging stuff and being the in between, between the content production and getting it to a consumer is exactly the right place to be. I think that video is really the future of the Internet as well. The text business is where I come from and where I live and it’s easy to search, and so forth and so on, but YouTube as I understand it is the second largest search engine. What is that about? That means that people who are younger than me think of things in video and it is really, really important for all media companies to be in pictures at this point. So, that’s the reason why I am interested in Curation, I have a lot of faith in this space and I think it’s gonna go really far, and it’s gonna be in the right place with the right technology. (LINK: http://bit.ly/cPDkae)

The combination of curation and wholly-original content goes at the core of the cost issue for a publisher. One of the fundamental challenges of transitioning a print content model to the web is that the value of the ad inventory online doesn’t support that same content costs as the value of the print ad page.

Ultimately, content costs are a by-product of hours of labor. By shifting talented content professionals to a mode where they are able to identify and share good content — thereby extending the brand “voice, as Seave calls it — as well as create that content, the business is able to increase the ad inventory attributable to the content costs.

This is the kind of thinking that is both relevant to the digital market and attacks the puzzle of costs.

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The top 10 posts on ViralHousingFix in 2009

December 17, 2009

As the year winds down, I was curious which posts over the course of the year were the most popular. I was pleased to see that the posts that had resonated the most with all of you were ones that I felt like I’d achieved some clarity around an idea that I’d been working [...]

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Why activating News Corp.’s content teams on social media is Murdoch’s only hope

December 8, 2009

Rupert Murdoch has been the poster boy for the frustration legacy content creators have with the current way that content moves around on the web. What Murdoch is missing is that the answer lies not in setting up more barriers, but in getting control of his distribution through more aggressive deployment of social media [...]

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What can you learn from the statement “Facebook is the new AOL?”

December 8, 2009

MarketingProfs today has an interesting post from Leigh Duncan-Durst, a 20-year veteran of internet marketing and e-commerce, about some of the likely challenges Facebook will face as it develops its platform in order to be more relevant for marketers.
Do the math on 20 years: that puts Duncan-Durst in the interactive world in 1989. [...]

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The SideWiki Debate

October 14, 2009

MediaPost has a good article looking at the issues around Google’s SideWiki. The reporter focuses on the activist approach Steve Foley, CEO of iCyte, has taken to point out the challenges and inconsistencies of the tool.
Basically, critics of SideWiki, or a service like Squiddoo’s Brand aggregation feature, claim that the add-on services are bifurcating [...]

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Squiddo, Brands in Public & the risks of aggregation blackmail

September 26, 2009

This week Seth Godin blogged about a new service from Squiddoo that would aggregate the constantly changing digital footprint of a brand, using automated feeds from disparate social media and traditional web sources. The service is called Brands in Public
Squidoo has built several hundred pages, each one about a major brand. More are on [...]

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