Quick & Dirty: Resilience

re·sil·ience  [ri-zil-yuhns, -zil-ee-uhns]
–noun

1. the power or ability to return to the original form, position, etc., after being bent, compressed, or stretched; elasticity.
2. ability to recover readily from illness, depression, adversity, or the like; buoyancy.

The ability to bounce back. To take a hit, however severe, and recover. To decide that regardless of circumstance, pain and failure, continuance is the only option.

To be resilient is a choice. It’s the choice we make everyday to fight back, to get up, to keep breathing.

To be resilient is the willingness to try again. However battered or bruised, you are resilient when the wounds cease to cause infliction.

To be resilient is to believe. And to allow that belief to fuel your passion and your sincerity. It is belief in yourself and your cause and your mission even when all others fail to see the promise.

Some people, some marketers are born resilient. Others have to find it. And others still choose to be the batterers. In which category do you fall?

Have We Forgotten About Podcasting?

I’ve actually been meaning to write this post for a while but today it seems more than fitting after attending PodCamp Toronto 2010 over the weekend.

What may be more ironic than this post sitting in my drafts folder for weeks untouched is that I didn’t even attend a podcasting-centric session at PodCamp. PodCamp began (and remains) an unconference that thwarts the rules of traditional regimented conferences. Founded by Chris Brogan and Christopher S. Penn, the first PodCamp was held September 8-10, 2006 in Boston.

Podcasting

Though the new media unconference roots its title in the word “podcast”, it is not just about podcasting, which often leaves many observers baffled. However, the inherent beauty of it all is that podcasting actually predates the rise and overwhelming dominance of blogging, social media, social networking and video (all online!).

As individuals and businesses focus energy, time and resources into Twitter and Facebook, podcasting seems to be gathering dust on the sidelines. But is this just deception brought on by the novelty of timelines, retweets, statuses and fan pages?

eMarketer’s article on podcasting going mainstream clearly delineates that podcasting is growing not receding despite the lack of attention it seems to be garnering as of late. In 2010, 13% of US internet users are listening to podcasts and that number is projected to increase to 17% in 2013.

Don’t forget or give up on podcasting. Embrace it. If you think that it has lost its importance or relevance or impact, don’t.

Interviews. Experts. Launches. Best ofs. Reviews. Lectures. Presentations. Limitless opportunities when it comes to podcasting, and instead of a character limit, you have a time limit. A lot more time than characters to say what it is you need to say. It’s time to take advantage of the growth in listening audience. Time to tap into the audio medium (and hopefully couple it with video + social). Time to create a voice for you and/or your organization.

PodCamp Toronto 2010 In Review

PodCamp Toronto 2010

PodCamp Toronto 2010, a new media unconference, brought together a bevy of like-minded social media and tech geeks, entrepreneurs, experts and amateurs.

I attended six sessions: 3 were Priceless and 3 Less than Lukewarm, my reviews follow:

ePress Kits for Podcasters, Web Owners & Social Media Users — Julia Hidy

From the title alone, Julia’s sessions sounded extremely insightful. All about how a marketer, a PR agent, or any entrepreneur on the street could create a complete press kit to bring a stronger voice either to themselves or to the organization for which they work.

Julia’s an author, multimedia producer and overall PR guru but her talk was rushed (due to time and lack of organization) and her insight vastly lacking. I could see the golden morsels underneath the sporadic switching between pages in her PDF document/presentation. The saving grace of her session was the “one sheet.” For both those who did and didn’t know about it, Julia exclaimed its importance, versatility, and possibility as an interactive piece of content.

You can request Julia Hidy’s presentation here. Follow Julia on Twitter, @juliahidy

How and Why to Tell Great Stories — Mark Evans

Mark Evans's How and Why to Tell Great Stories - PodCamp Toronto 2010

Julia Hidy’s uninspiring glance into ePress Kits certainly left me wanting, and Mark Evans was able to fulfill that need. A tech reporter, social media expert, PR rep and blogger since 1994, Mark Evans delved into the ever-current and ever-popular subject of storytelling.

When I think stories, I think Godin or Jobs. Mark certainly agreed by setting the tone for his session with a snippet from Steve Job’s presentation introducing the iPhone. I enjoyed Mark’s candour and personality and how he cultivated the energy in the room with his own storytelling.

The best takeaway would have to be his recipe for a GOOD STORY: Interesting, Educational, Engaging, Entertaining, Informative and Authentic. Too bad they all start with vowels or else we would’ve had a new acronym on our hands!

Follow Mark on Twitter, @markevans

Crowdsourcing Volunteer Technical Communities with Crisis Commons — Panel

Crisis Camps's Crowdsourcing Volunteer Technical Communities with Crisis Commons - PodCamp Toronto 2010

An odd, supposedly panel-formatted presentation with little focus and direction, Crisis Commons failed to capture me both emotionally and mentally.

They attempted to tell (or prove to?) me the efforts and strides they’ve made through the employment of social media to “spread the word” and “help Haiti” and “connect with traditional media”. At the end of it, I was left thoroughly confused and most disappointingly uninspired.

Follow CrisisCommons on Twitter, @crisiscommons, and/or CrisisCamp, @crisiscamp.

The business of online communities for women — Panel featuring Erica Ehm, Kim Vallee and Eden Spodek

The business of online communities for women - PodCamp Toronto 2010

An all female panel showed tremendous promise. Following the Crisis Commons debacle, a strong feminist (though not exclusionary) outlook on media and business was what I needed. I did’t get it.

It felt more like a Yummy Mummy Club promo tour led by Erica Ehm than a serious exposition on female communities and their impact on social media. One questioner explained that Erica’s Club gave her a voice which she could not have found otherwise. A second questioner, while postulating on the difficulties of using WordPress, exclaimed mid-sentence that she was single and wasn’t fortunate enough to have a techie husband like Kim Vallee. Oh, despair.

These remarks, among others, left a distinct and sour taste in my mouth. Women should be, and are, proud, powerful, influential and smart. What’s remarkably unbearable to watch is the dismantling of this truth with the ignorant and unaware.

The session was poignantly concluded with Erica Ehm’s assertion that “Most women have blogs, you know.”

Techvibes.com – Creating a Toronto Community — Karim Kanji

Karim Kanji's Techvibes.com Creating a Toronto Community - PodCamp Toronto 2010

Thank goodness for Karim Kanji’s powerful wit and perfectly placed “right ons” throughout his presentation. Thank goodness for his authenticity and his unabashed admittance of not knowing it all and being more than willing to learn.

Karim was there to tell his story more than anything else. Though the title of the session is vastly misleading because he wasn’t there to tell you how to create a community but rather explain his personal journey to develop a brand and a community of his own.

A writer for Techvibes.com, Karim used to write 3 posts a day and had managed in the first half of January to publish more than 70 posts! I asked if he every slept and he responded jovially with a sly smile, “Yea, I sleep everyday.” ‘How much’ should’ve been my next question.

He started off not as a writer or a geek or a techie but as someone who wanted to change and possibly make change. He made mistakes (probably still does) and has learned from them all. Speaking is his thing, I hope he knows it.

Follow Karim on Twitter, @karimkanji.

Applied Communilytics (In a Nutshell) — Sean Power

Sean Power and Claire Kerr (@snotforprofit) after Applied Communilytics - PodCamp Toronto 2010

Sean Power was brilliant even without a working slide deck! The smartest of all the speakers I encountered at PodCamp, a true expert and powerhouse when it comes to communilytics (community + analytics).

He was energized and equipped with a strong voice that was unfortunately heard by only a few at the final session of the day. My favourite tidbit was his pronouncement after citing his third list, “I love lists!” 4 types of sites. 8 types of media. 4 types of goals. There’s much more in his funnel than he explained, but the knowledge that he has is what all organizations are looking for right now. To explain, implement, optimize, and measure media/online/community etc.

Powerful content and I only wish I had more. Sean’s presentation is available here. His book, Complete Web Monitoring, written with Alistair Croll, available here. Both of which I think I’ll be reading and then re-reading!

Follow Sean on Twitter, @seanpower.

Thanks PodCamp for an all-round exciting, entertaining, and albeit tiring event!

Google Buzz Or Microsoft Outlook Social Connector

What is Google Buzz?

Google Buzz is a social media sharing experience inside of Gmail, which includes public or private sharing, inbox integration, photo-friendly sharing, connectivity to Twitter, Picasa, Flickr and Reader, real-time updates, and delivery of content based on Google’s recommendations.

What is Microsoft Outlook Social Connector?

On the flip side, Microsoft Outlook plans to roll out a bevy of social media integration options with its 2010 Outlook Social Connector (OSC) release. As reported by Mashable, the OSC will include integration with Facebook, LinkedIn, and MySpace with, I’m sure, more options on the horizon to be announced.

Buzz vs. OSC

Google Buzz isn’t worth the time and it will add the most value for those heavy Gmail users (that use Gmail as a primary email client and/or are working in the client for multiple hours a day). For those high-level users of Gmail, Buzz can offer the advantage of a single-stop, integrated experience.

In order for this integrated experience to be truly representative of the current social media landscape, it would require the inclusion of Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Digg, and all of the other major players. What this creates is a feed system (much like Google Reader) that aggregates ALL, not some, of the social media content being made available by those you want to follow.

Microsoft Outlook Social Connector wins (despite the poor branding). That is, they win if Buzz is unable to secure the same big names (and I mean all the big names) to integrate with what should be the ultimate aggregated social experience.

Microsoft Outlook owns market share at 39% as the primary email client of choice. Gmail trails in with a much lower 5.5%. In a business environment, Outlooks is critical to almost all work-related tasks. It is the core communication point for internal and external communications. Employees are immersed in it for at least 8 hours a day. An integrated social media experience within the primary email client of choice is a marriage for success.

The disadvantage for both OSC and Buzz in a work setting is productivity. If OSC secures Twitter alongside the others, then it poses a significant threat to worker productivity what with the number of distractions suddenly multiplying exponentially. Gmail, also used within work settings, poses the same problem with Buzz.

Employers could, of course, prohibit usage of these services but we all know the social clients mentioned above are just a click away in any web browser.

Are either of these social media integrators worth your time? Do you immediately have preference for one over the other simply based on brand and experience?

What I think the most pertinent question to be asking is: Will this equation of Email+Social be the next phase with social media or will an unknown third-party, comprehensive social media aggregator eclipse Google and Microsoft?

The Twitter Experiment | SimrenDeogun

Follow Me on Twitter

It’s no secret that I haven’t been a fan of Twitter in the past, just read this if you want to know why I haven’t been using it.

I’ve called it a fad, a distraction, and an unworthy investment of my time. But, I can admit that I have said all this without giving it a fair shot. This blog just celebrated its one year anniversary and this post is number 100! A couple of really great milestones and also a really great opportunity to try and prove myself wrong.

So, I’ve joined Twitter (again!). Though the first time was an indubitable failure!

Why I’ve Taken the Twitter Dive
When I first encountered Twitter, about a year and a half ago, its promise as a professional and marketing tool was as yet undiscovered. Even today, businesses are confused and distraught over how to use Twitter effectively, how to measure ROI, and how to engage in social networking as a whole.

Reality dictates though that businesses (and marketers like myself) can no longer ignore the growing prevalence of social media, including Twitter, despite how fleeting its impact.

Here enters The Twitter Experiment. Join. Start Tweeting. Integrate Twitter across my blog, LinkedIn, Google Buzz, and also a dash of Facebook. And let us see if I can validate Twitter as a tool for professional networking, knowledge sharing and brand building.

This blog has already received its necessary facelift to accommodate this exciting new foray into the twittering world and I hope you’ll join in.

Measuring the Success of “SimrenDeogun”
Joining and tweeting is the easy part. But a large part of this experiment will be proving that measuring the success of my Twitter account is also easy.

The commonly shared perception is that Twitter (and other related social media outlets) are difficult to measure. We can’t track progress. We don’t know how to integrate it into the funnel. We don’t understand how to measure key factors such as ROI and ROE.

I don’t have the answers. YET. But I will. And to help, I’ve chosen the following (recommended) third-party applications to measure and analyze the perceived success of #SimrenDeogun:

Twinfluence
Twitalyzer
Trendistic
TweetEffect
HootSuite

With time, I also hope to write reviews that offer insight into these and other tools to assist you in your social media efforts.

The Timeline
I’ve set a preliminary timeline of cornerstone points of measurement beginning with the 1 month mark followed by 3 months and then 6 months. At each point, I will analyze, with the aid of the above tools and my own marketing knowledge, how Twitter has developed, grown, and proven either beneficial or detrimental.

As I learn more about Twitter and its usage patterns, these timelines will surely change. However, at the core of this experiment is to provide quantitative and qualitative data on how Twitter can be used as a part of marketing, to build my personal brand and to enhance the following of this blog.

Follow Me
Follow Me on TwitterSo, are you following me yet?
Please do.
I won’t take no for an answer!
But, I will return the favour.

One Year Anniversary

Today marks my blog’s one year anniversary, so the following retrospective is going to be completely selfish!

Fourteen months ago, I lost my job.

Thirteen months ago, I decided to teach myself HTML and CSS.

Twelve and a half months ago, I decided to design, code and build (from scratch) my own website.

One year ago, I was jobless and from that this blog was born.

This blog has always been as much about you the reader as it has been about me. Everyone who is anyone will tell you that if you want to run a successful blog, if you want to be a professional blogger, if you want to make money from blogging, you should never make the blog about you.

I obviously decided not to listen. This blog is a success to me no matter how many readers, clicks, or subscribers. I’m not selling anything. I’m only offering what I know. And I continue to learn along the way.

2000 visits. A handful of subscribers. More links everyday. Now it’s time to take this blog to the next level. Won’t you join me?

Betty White & Snickers Score Best 2010 Super Bowl Commercial

My pick for this year’s best Super Bowl commercial has to be the uber-funny and surprisingly ingenious ad from Snickers featuring Betty White as her classic comedic self.

USA Today agrees. Snickers’ surprise hit earns the top spot in their real-time Super Bowl Ad Meter, more about USA Today’s Ad Meter results here.

Kudos to Snickers for opting for funny and innovative as opposed to edgy and inappropriate. I have to call out GoDaddy.com in this category for sticking to its redundant “sexy” Danica Patrick ads which offer no novelty and no respectability.

Audi’s Green Police ad (seen above) also makes my list for keeping it current and youthful. It was refreshing to see them take the rising concern for environmentalism and offer a positive and light-hearted perspective, watch Audi’s Super Bowl ad here.

With the 44th Super Bowl attracting the largest viewing audience in all of U.S. TV history, at an unbelievable 106 million viewers, advertisers might reap the largest benefit in years. A larger audience with a stronger demographic may make that $3M Super Bowl ad price tag a little more justifiable.

Hmm, now why do I find myself suddenly craving Snickers….

Super Bowl 2010 Commercials Cost A Cool $3M

CBS is charging an average of $3 million per 30 second spot for this year’s 44th Super Bowl.

I heard some chatter of possible discount pricing this year in light of the recession but have been unable to corroborate its validity. Despite any discount the powerhouse advertisers might receive, my real concern is how much they’ve spent on producing the commercial itself?

In the midst of dozens of commercials vying to be remembered, large organizations dole out the big money for the most action-filled, quirkiest and/or risque spots ever to be featured on TV.

Which ones come to mind? GoDaddy.com and Danica Patrick. Pepsi with Britney, Beyonce and P!nk. Mountain Dew and a cheetah.

Oh and the best commercial that wasn’t even a commercial: Wardrobe Malfunction 2004 care of Justin and Janet.

What a fickle friend advertising is? Bet the corporations were mighty fired up the year of Nipplegate — their ads, I’m sure, were all far-swept from memory. And yet, with everyone likely putting up unhealthy sums of dough this year — bank, auto and health crises abound — I can’t help but think that the simplest of ads would end up being the biggest cash cows.

I just think that in the middle of the celebrities, special effects and big-budget action, the best ad might be the one that opts for simplicity, cleanliness and strong messaging. It would, at least, stand out. And hey, isn’t that the objective?

We’ll see who comes out on top this year, check out the commercial lineup here.

Best Picture Oscar Noms With A Side Of Marketing

2010 Oscar nominations were recently announced, and this year’s Best Picture category includes an unprecedented 10 movies:

Avatar” James Cameron and Jon Landau, Producers
The Blind Side” Nominees to be determined
District 9” Peter Jackson and Carolynne Cunningham, Producers
An Education” Finola Dwyer and Amanda Posey, Producers
The Hurt Locker” Nominees to be determined
Inglourious Basterds” Lawrence Bender, Producer
Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire” Lee Daniels, Sarah Siegel-Magness and Gary Magness, Producers
A Serious Man” Joel Coen and Ethan Coen, Producers
Up” Jonas Rivera, Producer
Up in the Air” Daniel Dubiecki, Ivan Reitman and Jason Reitman, Producers

So, what’s the deal? When was the last time you can remember a diverse selection of films (like the above) being nominated in this prestigious category? Alternate planet civilizations. Aliens. War. Thriller War. Animation. And Drama. It’s quite the impressive melting pot.

My point is that a large number of the nominees — unlike most years — come with a high probability of having been viewed by a larger proportion of the general public. And with that comes the wonderment of marketing.

This is not to undermine the Academy or any of the movies being honoured but there is more than enough skepticism in me to wonder, just wonder, if the godly Academy may be employing a little bit of strategic marketing. Perhaps reaching out to the otherwise oft-abandoned viewing audience.

Suddenly, there is much more than just one movie on the list that you and I have seen. Suddenly, I’m much more interested in the Oscars. Why? Because now there is this attempt to relate to me and relate to the films that touch the general public as opposed to those from which we are secluded.

10 movies! How many have you seen? And how much more do you care about the Oscars because those movies are nominated?

Killing The Fear Of Direct Mail

I love digital. I’m learning to love social media (partly due to necessity) because of how it is cannibalizing digital marketing. But on the flip side of digital is our dusty ol’ friend direct. Poor direct, all alone.

Why are we so afraid of direct mail?

It costs a lot of money. Difficult to measure ROI. Most of it ends up in the garbage. Turn around and reaction times are slow. And the conversation is practically nonexistent.

So what?

Remember the time when direct mail was the norm and everyone thought the internet was a fad? Ha! As we all laugh in the face of that heavy-handed skepticism.

But now, direct mail has been abandoned and forgotten. All the above reasons to be afraid are true but marketers wouldn’t be marketers if all we did was adhere to the norms.

The 21st century hasn’t brought space suits and flying cars but it has spawned the near-death of direct mail. Direct mail needs saving. It needs the superheroes of marketing to claw it out from under that meteor. And so I’m pleading to you to take a risk and be that superhero.

You really want to be remembered amidst all the clutter of digital? Why not try going old school with an amazing direct marketing campaign? We forget the power of the tangible. The hold-it-in-my-hand power of engagement. NOT the read-it-online-and-forget-it-two-seconds later syndrome sweeping the globe.

It’s mandatory to be online. Mandatory! There’s no substitute. But why not get innovative and do something no one else is doing? Let’s take direct and make it guerilla!

In my version, I eliminate the mailbox altogether (think direct mail but in the streets). I’m in, are you?