Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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How GE Makes Big Brand Content Feel Up Close and Personal

How GE Makes Big Brand Content Feel Up Close and Personal | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
How does the third largest company in the world connect with customers? In a recent interview, GE's Executive Director of Global Brand Marketing explains how GE focuses on brand content that uncove...
Jeff Domansky's insight:

From experimenting in various social media channels to storytelling in surprising ways, GE is showing the way to content marketing success. The Instagram example shows how good things happen when you take risks.

Great quote from GE's Linda Boff: "All of our content and social efforts are about finding the right audience, not the biggest audience."

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Strategic images: How visuals can shape your branding

Strategic images: How visuals can shape your branding | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
How important are Instagram, Pinterest, YouTube, and video to your external communications? Online marketing increasingly will rely on images as the digital world evolves, a study shows.



Jeff Domansky's insight:

Great insight from Shel Holtz: So, how do we make images strategic? What we need to consider next is embracing a social visual communications strategy that will help us succeed in information distribution and consumption.

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Facebook, Twitter, YouTube marketers: This is why you never, ever start campaigns on Friday | VB News

Facebook, Twitter, YouTube marketers: This is why you never, ever start campaigns on Friday | VB News | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
There are good times to start social media marketing campaigns, and there are absolutely horrible why-on-earth-would-you-choose-that times. How's a savvy online marketer to know which is which?

 

YesMail Interactive ran a comprehensive three-month study of consumer social engagement with online campaigns for 20 major retails brands, including Abercrombie & Fitch, The Gap, Ralph Lauren, American Eagle, J Crew, and Forever 21. It discovered some astonishing insights which it’s sharing with the world … such as why Tuesday is such a great day to kick off a campaign....

 

[Not jusy best day but also very valuable strategic insight for PR 2.0 and marketing strategists. - JD]

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How To Spot The Best and Worst Content Marketing Strategies

How To Spot The Best and Worst Content Marketing Strategies | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

While these inputs represent vital building blocks for connecting ideas, communities and people, successful content marketing strategies start with 2 core questions:

1. Who are we talking to…and why should they care?

2. What are we saying…and why should they share?


Content is the oxygen of your social media ecosystem. Strategy is the process of converting it into results by regulating what you do, why you do it and how. A content marketing strategy dependent on a specific channel, format or source will soon be on life-support as technology changes and interest wanes.


There is a better way.At Intuit we’ve had the opportunity to test, learn and iterate on several campaigns targeting global business professionals and small business owners. The content marketing strategy we’ve adopted focuses on maximizing the 2 core questions and scaffolding our content plans around consumer-driven motivations.The best and worst of content marketing strategies come to life in 4 types...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

This is a very interesting way to look at the best and the worst of content marketing strategies.

Patricia Raimundo's comment, September 5, 2013 10:05 AM
excelente post, PENSAR antes de crear la estrategia de mkt de contenidos.
Helen Wilde's curator insight, September 19, 2013 8:56 PM

being clear- who are we and who are you?

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Six social-media skills every leader needs | McKinsey Quarterly

Six social-media skills every leader needs | McKinsey Quarterly | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Few domains in business and society have been untouched by the emerging social-media revolution—one that is not even a decade old. Many organizations have been responding to that new reality, realizing the power and the potential of this technology for corporate life: wikis enable more efficient virtual collaboration in cross-functional projects; internal blogs, discussion boards, and YouTube channels encourage global conversations and knowledge sharing; sophisticated viral media campaigns engage customers and create brand loyalty; next-generation products are codeveloped in open-innovation processes; and corporate leaders work on shaping their enterprise 2.0 strategy.

 

This radical change has created a dilemma for senior executives: while the potential of social media seems immense, the inherent risks create uncertainty and unease. By nature unbridled, these new communications media can let internal and privileged information suddenly go public virally. What’s more, there’s a mismatch between the logic of participatory media and the still-reigning 20th-century model of management and organizations, with its emphasis on linear processes and control. Social media encourages horizontal collaboration and unscripted conversations that travel in random paths across management hierarchies. It thereby short-circuits established power dynamics and traditional lines of communication.

 

We believe that capitalizing on the transformational power of social media while mitigating its risks calls for a new type of leader. The dynamics of social media amplify the need for qualities that have long been a staple of effective leadership, such as strategic creativity, authentic communication, and the ability to deal with a corporation’s social and political dynamics and to design an agile and responsive organization....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Social-savvy CEOs may be a competitive advantage in the future. This McKinsey Post explores the challenges and how GE is responding. A valuable, must-read for every communication and content marketing strategist.

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