Come to our upcoming BlogWell: How Big Brands Use Social Media conference in Atlanta to hear UPS, The Home Depot, Coca-Cola, Solo Cup, Newell Rubbermaid, NCR Corporation, DeVry University, and Georgia-Pacific share 8 great case studies on corporate social media.
You’ll learn how to get started, get past roadblocks, and make your social media program phenomenal — all in one afternoon, for just $250.
You’ll get practical, how-to advice on creating great content, getting management buy-in, educating employees, simple and ethical disclosure, and engaging fans. You’ll ask questions, discover new ideas, and get answers from people who have been there, done that — all in four hours.
…and you’ll experience a bunch of great case studies, like this one from our BlogWell in San Francisco:
Chevron: Using LinkedIn to Target Decision Makers, presented by Jeordan Legon from GasPedal and SocialMedia.org on Vimeo.
[Welcome back to the You Can Be a Word of Mouth Marketing Supergenius! newsletter. This is text from the great issue all of our email subscribers just received. Sign yourself up using the handy form on the right.]
Great word of mouth marketers are on the lookout for moments that are especially suited to starting conversations, because they know so much of word of mouth is about timing. A few opportunities you can do it:
1> For a holiday
2> For a launch
3> For a milestone
1> For a holiday
If you ever need a great excuse to test that fun, creative idea you’ve had to get fans talking, try aiming for a holiday. During Christmas, you can follow Jones Soda’s lead and release a new, oddball product. Or, if it’s a company-created holiday, you could try what Discovery did for Shark Week and promote all the stuff your fans are creating. And if it’s April Fools’, anything goes — like this tongue koozie from Molson Coors.
2> For a launch
Product launches have built-in word of mouth opportunities. You’ve got something new, exciting, and interesting to share — the trick is finding the right talkers and helping them pass it on. Try a beta release to eager testers (Microsoft is famous for this), an offer that lets them share it with a friend or two (this is how Gmail launched), or asking them to apply to get a first taste (lots of online communities start like this).
3> For a milestone
When you’ve accomplished something big, use that opportunity to let your fans get in on the celebration too. When LinkedIn broke 100 million users this year, they sent a special note to their first million members, thanking them for their support (and telling them what their exact join number was). How cool is that? It was a nice thank you to their long-time supporters and a great way to get these early adopters talking about LinkedIn.