Online PR Blog by Custard Media

Posts tagged Social Media

Monitoring Buzz: 12 Tools for Keeping Your Company’s Online Image Under Control

Ten years ago, word-of-mouth marketing was simple. Businesses would treat their customers well, enjoy the referral business and ongoing attention they offered, and create an organic network of loyal, friendly customers. The typical customer base – particularly for offline businesses – was relatively small, and the rewards of success significantly less lucrative than they are today.

Then social media became a reality. Companies that were once ‘too small’ for long-term branding efforts became thrust into the limelight, empowered by online user reviews and granted thousands of loyal customers through passionate discussions and online exposure. More than anything else, the exponential growth made possible by social media built some of today’s most profitable and well-known online companies.

But it also left thousands of businesses unable to control their reputation. The offline world gave small providers security; without the multi-million-dollar revenue and star talent required to feature in a business magazine, there was little chance of their business ever seeing real public attention.

Now, with the cost of publishing hovering just above zero, the potential for businesses to be subject to online conjecture is greater than ever before. Major companies and small local businesses alike are equally able to be publicly praised, blamed, or shamed for their actions – occasionally forced to deal with inaccurate stories and utterly nonsensical anonymous claims.

These twelve tools have a single focus: helping you control, measure, and moderate your company’s brand or online image. Some are statistical, others visual, and others built around old fashioned survey data and market research efforts. All are effective, especially when paired with a customer-focused company and a marketer willing to foster discussion.

1. Google Alerts

Source: http://tinyurl.com/35ytcfj

Google Alerts is one of our favourite discussion monitoring tools. A simple application with a light business focus, Google Alerts allows its users to set up content monitoring alerts for certain phrases, search terms, or multimedia content. It’s user-friendly, remarkably simple, and has the potential to dramatically change how a business operates, especially when paired with a savvy operator.

We recommend that businesses start slow on their Google Alerts efforts, tracking major phrases and popular search keywords and only responding when absolutely necessary. With a month of statistics and search information under your belt, it’s easy to gain a realistic and balanced perspective of your business’s online reputation and support base.

Think of Google Alerts as a maintenance tool; a non-specific and general option for monitoring buzz and measuring how popular your company is online. It’s easy to live and die by the data Alerts generates, though it’s not a particularly sound PR strategy. Set up once-per-week alerts and you’ll gain useful information on your image, without affecting productivity or business output.

2. Social Mention

Source: http://tinyurl.com/3xxorty

What makes Social Mention deserving of our number two spot? Their own website puts it best, advertising the service as “like Google Alerts but for social media.” Social Mention is a simple search tool with a specific focus: giving individuals and corporate entities the ability to view any and all discussions about them through blogs and social media platforms.

What separates Social Mention from Google’s similar service is its deeper analytical monitoring options. Alerts offers users the ability to check when and where their brand was mentioned; Social Mention gives users tools to measure the depth at which their brand was discussed, the passion of users involved, and the likelihood that the discussion will continue.

The service is available through its website or as a convenient Mozilla Firefox search plugin. While the search plugin will save time for power users, we don’t recommend installing it if productivity is of great importance. Set up a once-weekly alert using Social Mention and you’ll gain a clean weekly discussion summary, without the potentially addictive always-on power of the browser plugin.

3. Omgili

Source: http://tinyurl.com/3an4nj2

There’s more to online conversation that just social media. Discussion groups and online forums have been mainstays of internet conversation for the better part of two decades, and remain some of the most active and potentially lucrative places for online marketers to be.

Unfortunately, they’re also some of the most difficult platforms to monitor. Forum software often ends up buried in Google’s search results, locked down due to a lack of page authority and limited keyword density. Similarly, discussion groups are often barred from public display, giving users few choices for interacting with company reps and spokespeople on their own platform.

Omgili aims to cut down on the ambiguity surrounding discussion forums. It’s a do-all discussion board search engine, and it’s a vital tool for ensuring that your business is up-to-date with how it’s publicly perceived. Social media platforms and aggregator may make up the bulk of light discourse about your company, but it’s forum threads that have the power to make or break your image.

4. TweetMeme

Source: http://tinyurl.com/2wymmen

TweetMeme is a news aggregation website with a twist – instead of taking user submissions from all over the internet, it archives and displays content only from Twitter. This gives it some unique value for marketers; not only does it bring together stories that have the potential to be about your brand, it gives your business a list of hot topics to work into social discussion.

We like to think of TweetMeme as Twitter’s very own Digg. Paying attention to the front page is a great way to stay up to date with the internet’s most important news, but it’s far from a substitute for true interaction. Browse through different sections of the website and you’ll gain an understanding of different industries and possibly inspiration for a few blog posts.

What you’re unlikely to gain, however, is a deep understanding of what your users are talking about regularly. We recommend using TweetMeme to search for power users to monitor independently in the future. Type your brand, business name, or product into the search occasionally, then use the results to shape your Google Alerts and Omgili email alert preferences.

5. Google Blog Search

Source: http://tinyurl.com/34t3j4m

When it comes to passive reputation monitoring, there’s little Google Blog Search can provide that Alerts and Social Mention haven’t already covered. However, Blog Search can be a powerful tool for actively checking up on blogger coverage and monitoring how effective your own promotional efforts have been.

Need to check how viral a company blog post has become? Use Google Blog Search to monitor coverage using your company’s trading name and the post’s title. A quick one-off search can reveal hundreds of results, each built around keywords that your Google Alerts account configuration may otherwise leave unrecorded.

6. Nielsen NetRatings

Source: http://tinyurl.com/32aho6m

Few online businesses need more than the most basic in reputation management – a quick scan using Google Blog Search and a weekly keyword alert is enough to keep their public face under control and their discussion relatively useful. However, large businesses can often have difficulty dealing with the sheer amount of discussion they generate, finding basic tools almost completely useless for monitoring meta discussions and overall coverage.

Nielsen are most well known for their TV ratings, but it’s their NetRatings monitoring software that’s attracted the attention of hundreds of major online companies. If your business prefers to deal with public attention in a ‘big picture’ sense, the NetRatings software suite could provide the most useful and actionable data of any online service.

7. HowSociable

Source: http://tinyurl.com/32sd7cj

HowSociable is one of our favourite social media reporting tools. It’s simple, effective, and perfect for gaining the initial information required for a complete social media monitoring campaign. Type in your company’s (or product’s) name and you’ll be hit with a series of numbers, each outlining your visibility level across different social media outlets.

This allows you to gain a quick, simple, and non-intrusive summary of your brand’s online power and marketing worth. It also allows you to separate the social good from the bad; if your products aren’t aimed at consumers but at other businesses, HowSociable allows you to view how much of your online coverage is coming specifically from business-focused social networks.

8. WordPress

Source: http://tinyurl.com/32v77zg

WordPress is more than a mere online publishing platform. The popular content management system has gained a huge following amongst webmasters and marketers, and its immense power as a social media monitoring tool is certainly a reason for its success. WordPress includes a number of features of immense value for marketers by default, including a basic analytics tool and trackback summary function.

Before you launch any conversation-focused marketing campaign, ensure that your website is fitted with basic tracking and analytics tools. A blank WordPress installation is the ideal place to start; add Google’s Analytics package to your website and you’ll have a comprehensive platform for checking which parts of your campaign are and aren’t effective.

9. Twitter Search

Source: http://tinyurl.com/3ajlpbr

If you want to avoid the intricacies of specialised software, Twitter’s own advanced search page is a great place to start monitoring discussion about your brand or products. The Advanced Search page includes operators to help customize and refine searches by location, date, and even the approval (or disapproval) of the person tweeting the information.

Users can further refine their searches to include tweets with outbound links, messages which have since been retweeted, or tweets which included a topic-specific hashtag or @ command. Thanks to Twitter’s open API and developer-friendly attitude, the Twitter search engine is available in several other applications, giving you a simple and ultra-specific discussion search whenever you need it.

10. Reputation Defender

Source: http://tinyurl.com/34xpew6

Created in 2006 and refined over the past four years to keep up with current social media trends, Reputation Defender is a simple reputation management tool with a focus on individuals and family users. Prices start from $14 monthly and give users basic coverage of their online identity, emailing weekly reports based on blog posts, public coverage, and their personal Google search results.

While we suspect that Reputation Defender’s abilities could easily be replicated with free tools, the software’s low price and simple usability make it a worthwhile option for freelancers aiming to keep their reputation shiny and free of worry. If the small monthly cost isn’t a problem, this software suite could spell the difference between a major contract and a missed opportunity.

11. Visible Technologies

Source: http://tinyurl.com/32zpklr

Visible Technologies isn’t an analytics service per se, but the developer behind a series of useful and business-friendly online monitoring applications. Our favourite is truPULSE – a social media analytics application which gives users instant access to online discussions, demographic data, and mainstream media outlet coverage.

It also allows users to monitor and control their social media profiles from one control centre – a particularly useful feature given the amount of profiles often required for complete social media interaction. Items can be monitored, posted, and stored in a easy-to-read RSS feed or offline report.

Pair truPULSE with a dedicated social media assistant and you’ll gain a powerful understanding of just how your company is covered and discussed online. Thanks to its simple reporting and display options, this application suite is one of our favourites for monitoring data independently and sharing with an organisation.

12. Tweetvolume

Source: http://tinyurl.com/366dzqc

Tweetvolume is online analytics made simple. Built by a team of marketing consultants and powered by Twitter’s own application programming interface, this ultra-simple web application searches Twitter for three popular phrases at a time, returning conversation data and giving business owners an idea of how frequently their products or services are discussed.

While not particularly useful for dedicated online marketers and reputation management specialists, Tweetvolume is a simple tool for gaining a very basic understanding of how often your products are talked about. We recommend searching once weekly, giving you an infrequent and productive way to check how popular and favourable your business has become online.

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5 Major Social Media PR Disasters

Social media can be a great PR tool for businesses, but all too often things can go very, very, wrong. From utterly clueless businesses experimenting with the internet to in-touch online businesses simply making amateur mistakes, the world of social media certainly isn’t one that you want to be caught in when you’ve screwed up.

These five social media mistakes must have hurt. From businesses to bands, CEOs to employees, social media PR disasters happen surprisingly frequently. These five caught our eye for sheer style, stupidity, and humor value.

1.  Whole Foods’ Political Debacle

Whole Foods, a brand that’s particularly popular amongst social media users, caused a stir in the blogging world in mid-2008 when CEO John Mackey made some negative comments about President Obama’s healthcare plan. While the comments were made in the Wall Street Journal and weren’t related to Whole Foods as a company, left-leaning social media users were outraged at Mackey’s conservative remarks, and created a 22,000-strong Facebook group calling for a company boycott.

2.  Attack Attack’s Horrible Music Video, and the Rise of Crabcore

It’s one thing to be made fun of anonymously on the internet, and it’s another altogether to have your official Youtube channel invaded because of a music video. Attack Attack’s latest music video drew jokes and criticism from just about every metal fan, who rushed to their Youtube channel to poke fun at their patently ridiculous dance moves.

How did Attack Attack respond? By pretending the old video didn’t exist, and filming a new one to replace it. Despite their best efforts, the older, significantly more hilarious video still draws thousands of views per day.

3.  Microsoft’s Horrible Windows 7 Ads

When it comes to advertising, competitor Apple Inc. have a clear advantage on their Redmond competition. Microsoft’s recent advertising campaigns have drawn a lot of criticism, mocking, and even entertaining parody in the blogosphere. Thousands of bloggers have challenged Microsoft to make a good commercial, and with their recent string of TV-bombs, it seems unlikely they’ll accept.



4.  Horizon Realty’s Ridiculous Twitter Lawsuit

Fancy being sued for the content of your tweets? Chicago-based property firm Horizon Realty decided that one user’s tweet was too much when they filed a libel lawsuit for $50,000. Her only offense? Calling a Horizon Realty apartment “moldy”.

Naturally, Horizon’s move drew a lot of negative feedback in the blogosphere and social media world. Who knew frivolous lawsuits could draw so much attention? Let’s hope Horizon Realty gets their settlement – they’ll need it after this wave of bad publicity.

5.  Dominos’ Youtube PR Disaster

This one isn’t a case of marketing incompetence as much as it is employee stupidity. In 2009, two Dominos employees uploaded a video to Youtube of them doing some pretty nasty stuff to customers’ pizzas. Dominos managed to get the video yanked off Youtube two days later, but the damage was done: some 1 million viewers saw the video, and news travelled quickly. Dominos later responded to the controversy, minimizing damage slightly, although the effects are still quite clear – search “Dominos PR”and you’ll still be inundated with coverage of the PR meltdown.

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Top 4 Social Media Mistakes

Social media is no longer an oddball marketing tactic, it’s a proven marketing method for thousands of businesses worldwide. With small businesses, major corporations, and Fortune 500 companies all rushing to create their own social media presence, we’re seeing significantly more social media successes.

However, alongside those successes are some embarrassing mistakes. From fake grassroots marketing to paid-for reviews, big brands occasionally make some major errors in the transition to social media marketing. These five mistakes seem to pop up embarrassingly often, so we’re put them together as an anti-template for social media marketers.

1. Online astroturfing

Normally reserved for “grassroots”political campaigns, astroturfing is the process of creating a marketing campaign that appears spontaneous and audience-driven, but is really planned out well in advance by the advertiser.

A standard practice for some offline advertisers, astroturfing rarely ends well in the online world. Social media moves fast, and users can quickly find details about online personalities and so-called “genuine” movements. Create real social media movements, not manufactured enthusiasm.

2. Being a brand, not a person.



People use social media platforms to connect with other people, not other brands. As valuable as an @Microsoft Twitter account could be, it’s unlikely to provide any direct interaction with customers. If your company is using social media for customer support, assign each employee a personal account, not just an anonymous company brand.

3. Moving too slowly.

A large number of offline-only companies are amazed at the speed of online business. Social media moves incredibly quickly, with major news stories traveling across the world in mere minutes. There’s no greater proof than the massive reliance on Twitter for recent news stories and world events. While traditional outlets take hours, sometimes even days to report, Twitter users have pieced stories together in minutes.

There’s a downside to this, especially for small businesses. While social media can promote you rapidly, it can also bring your business down without careful attention. Respond immediately whenever negative feedback hits the airwaves, and don’t let stories travel without your side out there.

4. Spreading your influence.

Social media is all about influence. When given the choice between 100 semi-valuable profiles or one ultra-influential profile, which would your business choose? Obviously, the choice is in the single profile, but thousands of businesses, intentionally or not, end up choosing the hundred.

For businesses with multiple employees, it’s unwise to spread influence across each and every account. Using individual accounts for technical support and customer assistance is a worthwhile strategy, but it’s especially wise to keep one brand-only account for major announcements, promotions, and business events. Ensure that your followers only need to listen to one account, and enjoy greater online influence.

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