Eat, Drink and Be Social- The Thank You Edition.

On May 28, 2010, in Featured, by tgoodridge
(photo by Derek Wilmot)

Dennis Crowley, Mike Schneider and Alexa Andrzejeweski (photo by Derek Wilmot)

By now you may have heard about an event held in Cambridge earlier this week combining the best minds in Social Media and Restaurants/Foodies/bloggers and more. I won’t recap the event for you because many others did (see below). Thanks everyone!

http://blogs.a-g.com/wp/?p=6152
http://sarahwallace.wordpress.com/2010/05/27/my-take-away-from-eat-drink-be-social/
http://thebostonfoodie.blogspot.com/2010/05/foodies-and-social-media.html
http://sierratierra.wordpress.com/2010/05/27/business-advice-tapas-from-food-and-social-media-conference/
http://bostinnovation.com/2010/05/24/eat-drink-and-be-social-bringing-together-local-and-national-tech-foodies/
http://www.grangehallmedia.com/2010/05/eat-drink-be-social-wrap-up/#more-75

But what I WILL do is thank the people that made it possible.

Eric Schwarz over at Grange Hall Media- he created the logo and the catchy name. The next version of this event won’t be called “Eat, Drink and Be Social” because well, Eric has other plans for the name. So stay tuned for a new name for a similar event announced in the next week or so. If you’d like the chance to pick the new name (and get 5 comp tickets to the next event- head on over here.)

Derek Wilmot. Pictures tell a thousand words, and well- take a look at these pictures that he took. If you are ever interested in hiring a top notch photographer for your event- he gets it.

Lindsay Pollard from Arrangements. Did you notice the flowers? Hope you did, and hope you hire her for your next event.

Ellie O’Keefe from Nestle Waters. During the event we didn’t drink from your standard plastic bottle of Poland Spring. We enjoyed Pelligrino and Aqua Panna in bottles. After all, we’re foodies.

Dante De Magistris. On Sunday night, the panelists were treated to a custom-designed dinner for us, a 6-course feast that took us about 2 hours to eat. A BIG Thank you goes to Jessica and Dante over in Cambridge for opening up their hearts, their kitchen, and their restaurant to us.

Joselin Mane and Boston Tweetup. Great promotional video, great publicity for the event, and stay tuned because Joselin is going to share some video excerpts from the panel with Mike Schneider, Alexa and Dennis.

Christine Major and Awareness. Remember that food you had on Sunday night at Dante? That was Awareness. Thank you Christine!

John Pepper and Boloco: For the inspired burritos on Monday afternoon. We were dying to have John attend, but he was out of town. Next time John, next time.

B. Good. This was my first time meeting Jon Olinto face to face AND tasting one of his burgers. Jon tells a great story, has a fantastic restaurant business, and I’m happy to be part of his family. (I just don’t want to run a marathon in a burger suit)…

Below are some sample pictures from the event- more of them can be found here.

Mike Schneider and Alexa Andrzejewski

Mike Schneider and Alexa Andrzejewski (photo by Derek Wilmot)

The program (photo by Derek Wilmot)

The program (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Alexa Andrzejeweski and Dennis Crowley (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Alexa Andrzejeweski and Dennis Crowley (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Leighann Farrelly: Yelp, Aaron Cohen, @eatboston (photo by Derek Wilmot

Leighann Farrelly: Yelp, Aaron Cohen, @eatboston (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Jody Adams: Rialto, Barbara Lynch, BLGruppo (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Jody Adams: Rialto, Barbara Lynch, BLGruppo (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Mary Catherine Deibel , Naomi Kooker, Amy Traverso, Leighann Farrelly (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Mary Catherine Deibel , Naomi Kooker, Amy Traverso, Leighann Farrelly (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Justin Levy (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Justin Levy (photo by Derek Wilmot)

(photo by Derek Wilmot)

(photo by Derek Wilmot)

Eat, Drink, Be Social

Derek Wilmot and Dennis Crowley

Derek Wilmot and Dennis Crowley

Flowers by Arrangements (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Flowers by Arrangements (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Jon Olinto: B Good, Naomi Kooker (photo by Derek Wilmot)

Jon Olinto: B Good, Naomi Kooker (photo by Derek Wilmot)

The Menu from Sunday night

The Menu from Sunday night at Restaurant Dante

dinner at dante

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Sun Tzu: The Art of Social Media…

On May 26, 2010, in Featured, by tgoodridge

sun_tzu_generalI was talking to a friend the other night and, very impressively in my opinion, he quoted Sun Tzu:  ”strategy without tactics is the slowest route to victory” but “tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat”

The concept is that having a strategy will ultimately bring you victory, but tactics alone won’t get you anything. You don’t have to be fighting a war to use this concept; it comes into play for every goal you have. As I drove home, I naturally started thinking about how the concept applies to social media and a quick search proved I wasn’t alone.

Strategy always comes first?
That was the consensus among the social media heavy-hitters (including our own Aaron Strout!) in a terrific blog post conducted by Lee Odden about a month ago. Here’s a quick review…

Shel Israel offered and enlightening quote from Louis Carol’s Cheshire cat: “If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will get you there.” He said you need to know WHY you want to use social media and establish specific objectives first, then use those to shape the tactics you choose.

Shannon Paul added that the real trick is defining strategy: “a strategy is not a timeline or a goal, even though these elements are often included in what people refer to as a strategy document. The actual strategy piece is the spirit with which you approach others and engage with them.” She always warned that social media evangelists in an organization need to empathize with people who don’t “get” the WHY of social media strategy intutively, and work hard to articulte strategies clearly and seperately from whatever tactic is hot at the moment.

But one of my favorite comments was from Des Walsh, who said “Tactics are fun, strategy is boring” and added the second half to Sun Tzu’s advice: “All men can see these tactics whereby I conquer, but what none can see is the strategy out of which victory is evolved.” His argument was that strategies allow organizations to manage a process intelligently, measure progress, and adjust as circumstances change.

What about flexibility?
And circumstances are changing in social media. Constantly. That was Guy Kawasaki‘s argument for starting with any form of social media marketing, because it’s easy to change directions. And you have to be able to change directions, because the no one even really knows what role social media will have for the long term.

The goal is to do more business. Social-media is a means to that end…Don’t focus on some kind of high-level strategy because no one really knows how to use social media yet. Focus on tactics: Get more followers, make them happy, promote your stuff to them every once in a while,” he said, and Joseph Jaffe agreed, saying the industry is still in the “bright and shiny object syndrome” phase.

But Toby Bloomberg said the overflow of new tools and tactics every quarter actually makes stragey more important: establishing that first, she said, allows a business to focus only on those tools/tactics that fit with its broader goals. She added, “You do have goals? Oh, that’s another conversation.”

What’s your philosophy?
Unfortunately, in my opinion, most of the responders didn’t focus on the points that Debbie Weil and David Alston made: if you’re not the CEO, it’s a long road to establishing any social media strategy in the first place. Alston advocated against integrating specific goals into a strategy for companies just starting down that road, saying that the C-suite doesn’t want to hear about how popular/effective/ubiquitous any social platform is today, they want to hear a strategy. He said “…borrow one if you need to. How could you go wrong with a strategy like: make listening to the voice of our community/customers central to how we make decisions as an organization.”

Weil added: “What’s tough in the 1st step in a social strategy: adopting the social media mindset”.

So what’s the bottom line?
Social media marketing is a loop that starts with internal buy-in. That creates the opportunity for developing a specific strategy, which in turn generates a method for adopting relevant tactics. You can then measure the effectiveness of those tactics, and use data to appropriately adjust your strategy as necessary. The result is a truly effective campaign that, ultimately, increases your bottom line. And that’s something we can all agree on…

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A Social Media Breakfast….

On May 6, 2010, in Featured, by tgoodridge

Social Media Breakfast #17Living in Boston, we’re lucky to be surrounded by some of the smartest social media minds in the biz. And, once a month (or almost) we’re lucky enough to bring all of those minds together for a Social Media Breakfast (The SMB was started by friend Bryan Person, and he has passed the torch to Bob Collins, who has carried it well.

Thanks to Diane Hessan and Geoff Hall at Communispace, we were treated to a smorgasbord of great insight from Aaron Strout, Kyle Flahery, and Edward Boches from Mullen. Unfortunately, I missed a bit of Aaron’s and Kyle’s presentation, but here are some quick nuggets to share with y’all

There are five keys to brand advocacy. Here are 5 simple things to remember….

Content: Take content from anywhere- from your company, your client, whoever. Be unique. Edward showed this great example of a fellow Mullen employee crashing into the door with a coffee cup. this simple piece of content ended up on the Ellen DeGeneres show.

Invent an Experience. So what happens when you have a passion for the Super Bowl and the brands that play in the same space? Why not record all of the real-time chatter about these brands during the actual Super Bowl. Edward and the team at Mullen created “Brand Bowl“- ending up with 310 million recorded impressions- not bad eh?

Let people have a voice. Best example of this is what Burberry is doing in the space. Let people provide their own pictures and video of their Burberry experience?

Conversation strategy. Don’t just let the conversation happen. Have a strategy about what people can talk about, how they can talk about it, and how you’ll engage and monitor it.

Have a Magic Formula: His magic formula is pretty simple…..

  • Break things into into little pieces. Make it easy for some people (employees, customes, and advocates) to understand and digest
  • Give them a pyschic reward. Edward brought this little robot with him, we all helped it get to the front of the room. People want to be part of the process
  • Trust the community. Sure, there’s the story of United Airlines, Dominos Pizza, and Nestle, but don’t be afraid. Build your community before you need it.
  • Don’t be afraid to ask. Your evangelists (if they trust you) Would love to tell your story. Ask them. Encourage them
  • Have a big smile. Share your appreciation, optimism, passion amd enthusiasm

NOTE: a last minute gems from Aaron…

“Key thing is getting social media from your brain to your heart”. Once it’s there, you’ll have that a-ha moment

For any comments, gems I missed, please add in comments below!

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