The Message is the Message: Albany Ad Club social media panel

This morning I attended the Albany Ad Club’s annual meeting and social media panel discussion, which featured five local PR, marketing and advertising professionals discussing their current use of social media tools and strategies. All were from different backgrounds and it was neat to see the contrasting methods and platforms that each preferred for communicating to their audiences and the various strategies they highlighted:

  • Steven Jeffes of EdgeUp Marketing uses LinkedIn and manages several groups. He connects with more than 15,000 professionals through his moderation of eight different LinkedIn groups. Jeffes manages employee groups for GE, Lockheed Martin and the Wharton School and also the popular Albany, NY Professionals LinkedIn group. He’s gained several consulting clients through the connections he’s made on LinkedIn.
  • Megan O’Toole from the New York State Bar Association has found that a combination of blogs, LinkedIn Groups, Facebook groups and pages have been an effective way to reach out to her organization’s members. She often uses traditional media (direct mail, e-mail newsletters) to promote these new media channels and the NYSBA is budgeting for Web advertising in 2010.
  • Gina Hyams works with several arts and non-profits in the Berkshires. She used Twitter to promote the Berkshire International Film Festival and to interact with filmgoers during the event. As a “Tweeter-in-Residence” for the festival, Hyams shared links to film trailers, film makers’ Web sites, and general information about the festival. During the festival, she would monitor and retweet mini-reviews of the films and would tweet information about parking and ticket availability and line length.
  • Patrick Boegel and his firm, Media Logic, have redesigned their business model and offerings to focus on a conversation-centric model of marketing. Through new tools, like their proprietary custom “Zeitgeist and Coffee” social media monitoring dashboard system, they are encouraging their clients to become involved in the conversations that are already happening about their brands. He stressed the importance of starting with a strategy and letting that dictate how and when you use social media tools for communication.
  • Paul Fahey of Zone5 discussed how really the “old school” principles of communication are the core of social media. He referenced Dale Carnegie’s book, published in 1936, that focused on how to establish good relationships with people. That’s what social media is really about today. He noted that there’s a lot you can’t control in social media – but you can control the way you respond and the principles you use to guide you in a conversation or interaction.

Following the panel, I captured a quick reaction from my table mate Jim Stagnitti, general sales manager for Clear Channel Radio. Here were his three takeaways:


(Free videography tip: Get a Gorillapod. Do not try to use a full glass of water to prop your camera on, or you could possibly knock it into the glass. Not that I’ve ever done that. Like, say, this morning.)

I had a side conversation with Jim and some of his employees about social media ROI after the panel. I agree that none of the panelists really did have a good answer when the question of measurement came up, but that’s about par for the course these days.

I directed them to Katie Delahaye Paine’s blog and talked about how ROI in social media is a lot like ROI in sales: How do you put a value on building relationships? Taking a client out to dinner? A round of golf? It’s still the million-dollar-question as to how you take the customer engagement and relationship-building that happens as a result of interactions in social media and link it to revenue gained or costs avoided.

As for Jim’s assertion that the medium is no longer the message and the “message is the message”… exactly. Social media is allowing information to be seen/heard/shared across platforms and with loads of added commentary, perspective and criticism. Consumers are no longer bound to receive messages exactly as brands or organizations dictate. As Patrick stated during the panel, “consumers are in control now and clients have to understand that their brand is not all their own anymore.” Right on.

Tech Valley’s first Social Media Breakfast

New York’s Tech Valley (Albany, Schenectady, Troy, Saratoga Springs) became the 25th location to host a Social Media Breakfast last Friday. It’s an event that I’ve been working for the last eight weeks to plan, and I was excited to see how it would go over in this area.

With more than 60 attendees (we had to cut of registration  after just three days due to the limitations of the room size) and two hours worth of engaging conversation and discussion, I’d definitely call it a success. As with any “real life” event, it was also great to connect with folks I’d previously only known through Twitter.

I moderated a panel featuring Mike Germano from Carrot Creative, Rhea Drysdale from Outspoken Media and Stuart Foster of TheLostJacket.com.

You can catch all of the Twitter chat (#smbtv) that happened during the breakfast here, but here are a few of the highlights:

  • No social network is “better” than another. Find what platform works for your audience. Don’t necessarily jump in with Facebook and/or Twitter if that’s not where your target audience is engaging. But, it’s important to protect your organization’s reputation across the Web by securing usernames. Use sites like Knowem.com to register a name across dozens of social sites so that trolls can’t appropriate your brand.
  • People become fans of brands on Facebook because they want to “tattoo” their profiles and associate themselves with that brand. People like associating themselves with cool or hip things. That’s why there are tons of Facebook fans for The Onion, Stephen Colbert, Coca Cola… but no one says, “Hey, I think I’ll become a fan of plumbing fixtures or sleep aids.”
  • People expect “stuff” to talk to/interact with them now. The GPS-enabled Oscar Meyer Wienermobile has a Twitter account. Interaction and being useful is key – not merely broadcasting. Products and brands talk to the network. The people behind the brands may leave the company, but if the brand is strong, its voice/image will remain consistent.
  • Mobile apps are emerging as the “next big thing” in social networking. The key is making apps easy for users to interact with and share with their networks. Apps are really only effective when their use is widespread. Use a related app not necessarily to sell a product, but to provide a useful service that helps improve your organization’s branding/reputation (“This app provided/built by…”).

Thanks so much to Rhea, Mike and Stuart for being such engaging speakers and getting Social Media Breakfast – Tech Valley off to a great start. Also a huge thanks to the event sponsors, All Over Albany and SUNY Cobleskill (who also provided cool schwag for everyone in the form of coffee mugs).

A few pics from the event:

Pic from panel table, taken by Mike Germano

panelview

Photo from back of room, courtesy of Jim Stagnitti

backroom

Panelists rockin’ the mugs from SUNY Cobleskill (photo via C. Abunga):

mugs

If you’re interested in attending the next SMB-TV (hopefully mid-August), follow @smbtv on Twitter or join the Facebook group.