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social media activity

A couple of months ago, Adam Japko and I sat down with two of our top editors to discuss the impact of social media sharing on the traditional magazine editorial workflow.  The conversation was stimulating and I thought it would be useful to share some of my notes, since the observations from the meeting form a practical framework for implementing a content-sharing model within a traditional magazine team.  (For background on the content-sharing model, you can see this post from last year.)

Diane Carroll is the editor of At Home in Arkansas and Clint Smith is the editor of Atlanta Homes & Lifestyles. Both have been at the forefront of integrating social media sharing into the day-to-day routine of their magazines.

The work of their teams has contributed to significant increases in web and Facebook activity around the brand.

Our conversation focused on what changes were necessary to execute the social media sharing and about what impact the sharing has had on their market presence.

The Conversation:

Diane opened the discussion by talking about how expanding the social media channels for At Home in Arkansas has changed the way she thinks about people and projects in her market.

She related an example where she was talking with a design resource in her market who wanted to get coverage in the magazine.

In the past, a limited inventory of editorial pages would have prevented her from giving this resource coverage, Diane shared.

With the addition of social media channels, there are multiple ways to share information about this resource with her audience: creating a blog post, doing a Facebook update on the fan page, and, in this instance, inviting the resource to do a guest post for the At Home blog. The resource came through with “a really great post,” Diane shared, that was interesting and useful.

The social media outlets that At Home and Atlanta H&L have developed are big benefits, Clint and Diane agreed, creating an entirely new way of distributing information, creating an interactive and energetic face for the brand and building their brand presence broader in the market. A simple act like updated the Facebook fan page keeps people very engaged, they observed.

The key to integrating social media into the overall workflow is improved long-range planning and execution of the editorial calendar.

Clint and Diane are experienced, seasoned editors, so it was interesting to discover that both of them had created the bandwidth for executing their social media programs by leveraging and improving their execution of an old magazine tool – the editorial calendar.

The focus was two-fold: improving the execution of the long-range features in the magazine editorial calendar, so that they weren’t racing to get pieces finished right at deadlines; and creating an editorial calendar for the social media content, so that they had a clear expectation of what work would get done when by whom.

The first task was to improve upfront planning. Both editors said that their upfront planning and execution on the print issue had improved as they had increased their social media activities. Without being explicit, it was clear that both Diane and Clint had used improvement of the existing processes in order to create the time resources needed to execute their social media plans.

The second task was to make the social media activity more routine. This required taking the same planning approach to social media as was used for the print issues.

Both At Home and Atlanta Homes & Lifestyles have created weekly social media content schedules.

These schedules are designed to achieve several goals:

  • Share all of the content in the issue through the social media channels;
  • Keep a regular flow of content on the brand blog and Facebook pages;
  • Increase interaction with other bloggers in their topic area and market;
  • Increase engagement with the community around their brand.

At Home has structured is weekly calendar around topics:

  • Monday: General post
  • Tuesday & Thursday: Share content from the latest magazine issue. This can be a Room of the Week, or a fashion segment, or a design project.
  • Wednesday: Recruit a guest blog, typically from someone who has been featured in the magazine;
  • Friday: Friday Favorites, a list of links to other blogs and comments that the staff found interesting during the previous week.

Altanta Home & Lifestyle has addressed the structure of its social media sharing by assigning a specific day of the week to different members of the content team. On that day, the team member is responsible for sharing something of value and interest on the blog and the Facebook page

This “staff blogger” schedule has helped to take the anxiety out of trying to make sure some content is being created each day. It also has the benefit of being predictable for the online audience; over time, a reader will notice that one of their favorites posts every Thursday, for example.

Creating a social media schedule shifts the focus and energy of the content teams, both Clint and Diane observed. One change is that the teams begin to look to other bloggers more. They’ve discovered that bloggers have an identity in the market much like top architects and interior designers. By bringing the bloggers into the umbrella of the brand, it increased the magazine’s presence.

Our discussion closed with some observations about the impact of social sharing on the market.

Clint and Diane commented that the “sense of connectedness” was  different. Things are more interactive: they get comments and ideas from a community that is enormously positive.

As editors, they are seeing more and more overlaps among the ways that they distribute information, and are thinking about new ways to integrate things.

In order to continue to draw benefit from this social sharing activity, the editorial teams would benefit from increased access to the results that they are driving, both in terms of audience to specific posts and sections of the web site, as well as the relative value of this audience to any advertising customers.

In the future, the editorial and sales teams will also need to coordinate the amount of audience that needs to get driven into specific sections of the web site and towards specific customer groups, so that the potential number of conversions to client activity is lined up with the expectations of the clients.

Conclusion:

An editorial team needs to implement four steps in order to increase the consistency and effectiveness of their social media sharing program.

  1. Assess and improve traditional planning and workflow:
    Many editorial teams can create incremental time by being more structured in their long-range planning and in creating their larger features with a longer lead time.
  2. Set specific monthly goals for your social media content
    1. Feature magazine content in individual posts
    2. Guest bloggers
    3. Featured blogs and comments
    4. Online-only features
    5. Community engagement
    6. Traffic/audience
    7. Fans
  3. Set up a weekly content plan
    1. Establish a social media content schedule
    2. Assign specific elements or days to individual staffers
    3. Communicate content schedule to entire team
    4. Have monthly meeting to review social media assignments and results
  4. Track results & feedback
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Real estate agents and brokers are faced with more choices — and more contradictory claims — than ever in how they distribute listings, connect with consumers and promote their brand. Real estate marketing used to be a pretty straightforward activity; now, it can consume big chunks of a realtor’s time, energy and money if not managed in a focused and sensible way.

I was asked recently to give a speech on how print media fit into a multi-channel real estate marketing program. Preparing my remarks, I realized that you couldn’t justify the inclusion of one marketing outlet over another in any program until you’d created a solid set of principles for the overall marketing program. And, with so much complexity and choice, those principles needed to be clear and simple.

In order to compete effectively and to leverage new tools efficiently, a realtor needs to apply three basic rules to their marketing program:

  • Distribute your listings everywhere on the internet, so that your properties are included in as many consumer searches as possible;
  • Invest in marketing outlets that let you stand out from the crowd and create tangible leads for your personal business;
  • Commit energy and focus on networking, particularly on digital platforms.

Applying these three rules make its much easier for realtors to decide how to take advantage of the  alternatives that are available to them and helps to drown out some of the noise generated by passionate advocates for specific solutions.

Each of the rules benefits from a little context.

Rule 1: Place your listings everywhere

The first rule is designed to take advantage of the way that consumers are using the Internet — as a limitless database of home-specific information.

While the “Internet” is a huge real estate space, it’s also a fragmented space. In February, for instance, there were more than 226 million searches on Google for “real estate.” More than 55 million consumers visited a real estate web site in February, according to Comscore/Media Metrix.

That activity, which is fairly consistent with prior months, came in a month when only 308,000 homes were sold.

So, while consumers are doing an incredible amount of research online every month about real estate, only a fraction of them are actual Buyers and Sellers.

three key priorities.pngFrom a marketing perspective, it’s difficult to find an affordable way to have a maximum impact by paying to promote enhanced internet listings. The first challenge is how many different sites consumers go to. You can’t find any one site that delivers the majority of the 55 million people who visited a real estate site. Realtor.com and Zillow are the two largest, with more than 6 million unique visitors, according to Comscore/Media Metrix. The third most visited site is MSN, at 5 million, and more than 11 sites have more than 1 million visitors each month.

In fact, the top 5 real estate sites have relatively little overlap in visitors.

This fragmentation means that a realtor has to focus on inclusion of their listings in every site, not over-relying on one or two sites.

Consumers expect to find listings in the leading web services. For a realtor who wants to be successful in working with consumers, internet presence is a baseline requirement.

This emphasis, however, can drive misdirected marketing investments, which leads to the second rule of realtor marketing.

In our research of home buyers and sellers at NCI, we’ve found that a visible commitment to advertising and marketing is a key decision driver for why consumers work with specific realtors.

75% of homes sellers said that an realtor’s ongoing advertising program was very or extremely important in their selection of a listing agent. In fact, 76% said marketing skills were one of the most important selection attributes. Home buyers reported high recall of agent advertising and that visibility was a primary driver of their selecting a specific agent to work with.

Rule 2:  Stand out from the crowd

When a realtor considers paid advertising, their focus needs to be on how visible their advertising investment makes them and how many measurable instances of business activity they will get from that investment.

Think about it: if 54 million people are searching real estate web site, but only 308,000 homes are sold in a month, that means that a lot of people are going to be looking at listings — and seeing a realtor’s personal information — without taking action. Being a frequent and visible presence in their search is going to benefit a realtor.

The challenge is how to find cost-effective and time-saving ways to become frequent and visible.

It doesn’t always mean trying to enhance your personal profile wherever real estate information appears. It means investing in a marketing platform that makes you stand out.

This was the point in my presentation that I highlighted the benefits of The Real Estate Book’s integrated media approach, combing print presence in a four-color catalog of homes with distribution of listing data to more than 40 web sites, including therealestatebook.com, with more than 1 million unique visitors a month.

The Real Estate Book makes a real estate agent stand out. We can demonstrate that the book is getting looked at by consumers. We can demonstrate that we drive phone calls, e-mails and web traffic to realtors. And, we can demonstrate that we do this at a reasonably cost in a format that takes very little time to execute.

The Real Estate Book isn’t the only way to stand out. Many realtors still use traditional signage at grocery stores, on benches or on billboards. The key is that these realtors understand that just having their listings appear in web searches doesn’t make them stand out enough to increase their share of their real estate market. (Of course, I do believe that The Real Estate Book is the BEST way to stand out in the local market!)

The explosion of home information on the Internet has not just changed the way that realtors need to think about marketing, it has also changed the way that they need to think about networking with consumers.

I’ve heard many agents bemoan the challenges of working with home sellers and buyers who have too much information from online sites and who think that they are experts.

The important thing for all of us to understand is that the consumer isn’t just get smarter, they are becoming more enthusiastic.

The National Association of Realtors has an interesting fact that shows that home buyers who rely exclusively on the internet for home information take twice as long to buy a home and visit three times as many homes as other home buyers.

This is the description of an enthusiast — they love to get deep into the topic, love to gather information and love to experience things.

Rule 3:  Network — in person & digitally

This expanding passion for home information creates a priceless opportunity for real estate agents to engage and excite potential buyers and sellers.

With the explosion of social media tools, this kind of enthusiast networking can shift onto digital platforms, like Facebook. This social networking activity is the core of the third rule of effective real estate marketing: increase your networking activity by leveraging digital tools.

Too many real estate agents believe that they can show their expertise by mailing out data about market trends and other real-estate topics. In fact, the best way to keep the interest of prospective buyers and sellers it to communicate your passion for real estate by sharing updates on social networks like Facebook that show you being active and engaged in the business of homes. These networks can share a new listing that you saw, or an interesting sale that occurred, or the reason why a new part of town has become so attractive. They are short, smart and informative updates. They help people who have connected with you through all your other marketing activity to see just how active a realtor you are.

re marketing balance.png

One of the key points of my speech was that the proper application of these three rules should balance effort, cost and return. The graphic above outlines the relative relationship of these three elements.

The broad distribution of your home listings should be very low cost and should go very wide. Marketing opportunities where you stand out and create business activity will require more cash investment and should have more measurable results. And your networking activities should be at the core of your marketing program; these will be of varying cost, depending on the approach you decide to take.

The component of the program that is more variable is the opportunities that make you stand out. A realtor can build a practice out of broad distribution of listings and very strong networking. Our experience shows us that there is a limit to how large that practice can be, because consumers maintain their bias towards working with realtors who are visible marketers, and any kind of high visibility requires some investment of cost.

Inevitably, when I make this last point, someone points to their blog and social media activity and says, “I am able to get a lot of visibility without spending money.”time is money.png

Time is Money. If you have the time and the talent to build visibility using social media tools and creating your own content, then you have been able to drive a sweat investment into a real asset. The reality is that most realtors don’t have the skills and disposition to do that kind of work. It’s important to the future of those realtors business that they can apply a set of principles to their marketing that makes them relevant, current and successful.

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What does the mobile internet look like?

February 12, 2010

The terms mobile internet and applications are pretty much abstractions unless you are right in the middle of it.
If you’re not one of the 10 million people or so who’ve moved to the iPhone, let me give you a brief tour of Let me show you what it means.
The four images to the right are [...]

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Beware! Bad graphics can derail a good article

May 31, 2009

What happens when a confusing graphic accompanies a good article? This one stopped me.

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If TV and magazines have the most impact as advertising vehicles, why is revenue down so much?

April 3, 2009

Research supports the impact of TV & print advertising, but revenue are down. What’s going on?

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