Tag Archive | "facebook"

Introducing: Stylo Small Biz Toolkit

January 23, 2010

 We are very excited to launch our own Small Business Toolkit. Support of small business has always been a strong personal interest of Stylo founder Julien Sharp, who firmly believes that small businesses are the backbone of a prosperous society.

To that end, Julien combined her 17 years of copywriting and content management experience with the technical backup of SmartSourcing Global, managed by founder Smita Yedekar, and the support of Stylo's own Minister of Technology, Mohd Rafie Kamaruzaman, to create a full array of services aimed at helping small businesses thrive in any economy. 

The Small Business Toolkit includes everything a business needs to:

  • Build a Brand
  • Promote and Build Recognition of that Brand
  • Grow that Brand Online via Social Media
  • Optimize Business Workflow/Productivity

We are all so happy to be able to help small businesses make a big-business impact!

Thoughts on Facebook’s 5th Birthday

February 13, 2009

facebook-logo2On Wednesday, February 4, 2009, Facebook (FB) celebrated its 5th birthday.  Who could have guessed that this company, founded in a Harvard dorm room in 2004 by Mark Zuckerberg, a then 20-year old undergrad, would grow so fast to become the social networking and Internet phenomena that it is today?  Although not the first social media networking site of the twenty first century, FB is indeed changing the way marketing and advertising is strategized, just like social networking is revolutionizing the printed news media (See http://tinyurl.com/cvovvj).
 
Just after lunchtime on January 8th, CEO Zuckerberg announced on the company’s blog the near unthinkable – the website had just added its 150 millionth member.  “If FB were a country, it would be the eight most populated in the world, just ahead of Japan, Russia, and Nigeria.” he wrote.  Incredible.  In August 2008 the site’s 100 millionth user signed up (Facebook blog).  This means that since then approximately 374, 000 people have signed up… every day!  According to ReadWriteWeb.com Myspace took 3 years to reach it’s 100 million members, while it took FB 4yrs and 6 months to accomplish the same milestone.  However, where MySpace’s numbers are declining (Mashable), FB is fast gaining ground.
 
This exponential growth shows that social utility sites such as FB works better as more people become members.  The more members, the more value added.  This is the classic Network Effect.  Some sources estimate that more than half of all FB users sign in every day.  According to FB more than 3 billion minutes are spent on the site each day!  A statistic to make your manager cringe!  (The Network Effect again – you go there ’cause all your friends and family are there already.)

It’s a marketer and advertiser’s dream – a captive, easily reachable audience meeting in a central location.  Not only that, but FB’s search options enable you to zoom in on extremely specific target audiences, or FB groups.  In addition, what makes social media – and FB in particular – so unique, is the “place” - or psychological mindset of your audience – where you meet them at.  “FB is a social utility that helps people communicate more efficiently with their friends, family, and coworkers…”, states the official FB Company Factsheet.  Visiting FB is like relaxing on the couch and watching a TV sitcom after a day of grind at the office.  Your mindset is different.  You are ready to meet people.  You’re relaxed and more accepting of outside influences and suggestions.
 
From a business perspective FB presents a definite paradigm shift with regards to marketing and brand management.  FB is a platform that facilitates the sharing of information through social interaction, in a trusted environment.  It is certainly not an advertising and marketing platform.  It is also not a tool for listening to and tracking consumers of your brand.  It goes beyond that, it is about engaging your audience and becoming one voice in a thousand.  It’s about putting the “social” in front of “marketing”.
Apart from some remarkable responsive corporations like Coca-Cola and BMW, the corporate world is too slowly waking up to FB’s possibilities.  Everyone wants a part of it, and no-one wants the competition to have the first say in the global discussion forum that is FB.
 
But fools are rushing in.  Many companies, large and small, are setting up their business presence on FB, instead of tasking expert communicators with the job.  The wrong message could cost you, and public opinion (read FB-opinion) is a fickle thing.  Let the experts take care of your online corporate socializing.  You’ll thank them.
 
Contact SCC for a free consultation.

By Marco Bouwer

Build Your Social Capital Ahead of the Masses (and They’re Coming!)

December 12, 2008 1 comment

I remember taking a job as an HR Manager for a medical billing company in 1993. The company had grown suddenly and they needed someone to manage the new hiring that was taking place and to set up some HR systems, handbook, training, etc. All the employees had computers, but they were dummy terminals that worked on the billing software running from a mainframe. No one had a personal computer. I was shocked. It took me some bit of time to explain to the 59-year-old president why at the very least I needed a PC, and actually why he needed one as well. Good times. I finally got one, and so did he. I set us up on email – on Prodigy!  I taught him how to use the PC and, though he probably used it more for practicing on beating his score on solitaire more than doing serious business on the non-billing computer, he was soon emailing away and keeping in touch with his clients regularly that way.

This was my first experience dealing with the great Generational Technology Divide.  Realize, I was not a techie, and I certainly didn’t do anything technology groundbreaking. And certainly I was not one of the first people to have/use email. In fact, I was very happy to admit that I was in the “second wave” of adopters, a bit behind the true “technorati.” But…I learned from this experience that while there were a lot of people who were using it as a very helpful business tool, there were hundreds of thousands who were still completely in the dark about what an impact email would have on every aspect of our professional and personal lives…the “third wave.” With that in mind, I helped quite a few clients in the early 90s learn to embrace email.

And that is how I feel today, with the gaining popularity of social media. Sure, there are a lot of social media “superstars” and I learn from them every day. But – also every day – I realize how many people out there are not even sure what social media is, exactly, much less how to use it to their business advantage.

When they ask why they should bother with all of this “stuff” and worry that it is is just time-consuming chatting, etc, I simply ask them to take a look at the numbers; an excellent example of these lies in these stats:

LinkedIn

Nearly 60% of LinkedIn users have high personal incomes and hold executive-level or consultant positions, Nov 10th, 2008, LinkedIn, Anderson Analytics.

Stats from CEO: 8 million to more than 30 million, while the staff has expanded from 60 to 370 employees, CEO alludes (but doesnt confirm nor deny) that revenues are $75 (million) to $100 million, The average age is 41 years old. The average household income is $109,000; 76 percent of them have a college degree or a graduate degree. It’s pretty evenly split between men and women, slightly more men. Forty-eight percent are outside the United States, from 07 to 2008. Nov, SFGate.

Facebook

Facebook usage skyrockets from election activity: Includes specific usage numbers, fans and supporters, Nov 5th, Source: Zdnet

Facebook 18 Million Unique Visitors in UK, top 5th overall web property, Sep-Aug 08, Source: Comscore

More than 120 million active users (does not indicate measure of active), Facebook is the 4th most-trafficked website in the world, More than 400,000 developers and entrepreneurs from over 160 countries, Over 52,000 applications are currently available on Facebook Platform, Nov 2008, from Facebook Stats Page

If the numbers are right, Facebook’s online users have grown by 30 million in the last four months, up from 90 million users in early July 2008. That means that Facebook is growing much faster than the 250,000 new users per day that the company had previously estimated, Nov 3, 2008, Epoch Times

Twitter

Global visitors to Twitter rose almost fivefold to 5.57 million in September from a year earlier. Nov 12, 2008, Comscore via BBC.

The numbers speak for themselves.  People are online…and they are going to stay online. The time is definitely now to begin to establish your social media presence. Whether you are working in one of the world’s largest companies or a solo entrepreneur, everything is equalized in the social media space.

My tip to you today is this: The second wave of adopters is moving full force. You really don’t want to wait to be in the yet-to-come MASSIVE third wave. You’ll be missing on the earlier opportunity to build your social presence online ahead of them all.  

Please fee free to forward this tip to your colleagues, clients, and others in your network. Stylo Creative Communications is happy to help by providing written content for blogs, profiles, and other social media outlets, and by growing our clients’ online social media capital through relationship building and reputation/community management.

We’ll see you out in the social network sphere!

(Start by following us on Twitter – we’ll happily follow back!)

 

This article will also appear on the blog of SEM-Group, and will be featured in the online magazine NetworkingNow.