mercredi 8 août 2012

Ikea’s New Mobile Application Makes Catalogs Interactive

Ikea's New Mobile Application Makes Catalogs Interactive

Posted: 07 Aug 2012 09:00 AM PDT

IKEAs New Mobile Application Makes Catalogs Interactive Guerrilla Marketing
IKEA has shown a lot of courage and boldness in their marketing and advertising but they are also practical which is exactly what their brand stands for – practicality and boldness.
This year, IKEA decided to turn a perpetually boring sales material like a catalogue to a genuine customer experience. By using available technologies, IKEA managed to give its customers a chance to see how IKEA products of their choice will look like in their homes.

The Catalogue

IKEA is adding a digital component to its annual catalogue. Customers need to download the IKEA Catalogue app that works on smartphones and tablets. Customers with the app can point their cameras on the catalogue pages with the phone symbols to unlock short movies, interactive activities and more photos that customers may mix and match.

The Product Experience

It's not the first time that a company comes up with an app where customers get a chance to see more of the product, but there has never been a company that is more appropriate for this kind of app than IKEA. It goes with the nature of the product. People would naturally want see how their homes will look like before buying pieces of furniture and IKEA made it convenient for them. No need for people to trust their imagination or rely on Pinterest to show them an approximation of how different pieces will go together. The IKEA app will do it all.

Learnings

It's always nice to play around with technology but the only way it will make sense is if it serves your product. New technologies are certainly going to come up in the future but the real challenge lies on how businesses will use those to benefit their customers and business.

IKEAs New Mobile Application Makes Catalogs Interactive Guerrilla Marketing

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lundi 6 août 2012

7 Ways to Prospect for New Customers With LinkedIn

7 Ways to Prospect for New Customers With LinkedIn:
social media how toDoes your company sell to other businesses?
Are you looking for leads?
There’s likely more new business for you on LinkedIn than you’re currently tapping.
LinkedIn now boasts 161 million members, including executives from each of the Fortune 500.
No matter the job title of your best prospects, you can find them on LinkedIn.
Here are seven ways to find new customers with LinkedIn.

#1: Develop Connections and Meet Second-Degree Connections

The people you’ve connected to directly on LinkedIn are called first-degree connections. This is your immediate network.
You can increase your network by clicking on “Add Connections” and giving LinkedIn temporary access to your email or by pasting your emails in.
add connections
Automatically access your email contacts temporarily to invite them to connect with you on LinkedIn, or add emails manually.

Below is an example of how your LinkedIn network can help your business:
Bill Waterhouse, a regional director for Technical Innovation, was the first person in the company to use LinkedIn. It paid off almost immediately.
Shortly after using his email contact database to grow LinkedIn connections, he was messaged on LinkedIn by someone he’d tried—and failed—to prospect before.
bill waterhouse
Bill Waterhouse of Technical Innovation caught a big fish with LinkedIn.
The person invited his response to a new RFP (request for proposal), which led to a $450,000 contract. Bill was only considered because he popped up on LinkedIn. One employee simply joining LinkedIn was a half-million-dollar payday for his company.
The warmer your first-degree connections are, the more you can do with them.
Here are some ways to progressively improve your LinkedIn connections:
  • Message them whenever you can (but don’t waste their time)
  • Ask them an expertise-request question via InMail
  • Create a LinkedIn Answers question and direct it to a number of the first-degree connections you want to develop relationships with
  • Connect with them and interact with them on Twitter
  • Meet up with them in person for lunch, coffee or drinks
  • Get close enough to friend them on Facebook
The people connected to your first-degree connections are your second-degree connections.
For example, you may have a coworker in human resources who is your first-degree connection on LinkedIn, and he or she has a first-degree connection that might make a good prospect. But because you have not directly connected with that prospect on LinkedIn, that person is a second-degree connection to you.
After you warm up first-degree connections, you can turn their second-degree connections into first-degree connections via introductions, or simply by emailing or phoning them and mentioning the first-degree connection.
Tip: You can get many people’s emails from Data.com.

#2: Watch the Newsfeed for Warm Relationships

Many people ignore the LinkedIn newsfeed in favor of other parts of the site, but you can filter the newsfeed to show only news from new connections.
First make sure you’re looking at the newsfeed by clicking on Home. Then look down until you see “All Updates” and choose “Connections” from the drop-down menu.
newsfeed connections
The connections view of your newsfeed reveals warm relationships.
If you see that one of your connections has just connected to someone you’d like to connect with, now is a good time to ask for an introduction!
The biggest problem with LinkedIn introductions is that sometimes the connections have gone cold. People connect with someone but have forgotten who they are a year later.
Many of us have LinkedIn connections like that (“Who IS this person?”). But fresh connections are top of mind, and their warmth can warm up your introduction as well.
Watching connections can also give you competitive intelligence.
If you see that someone in the same role as you at another company has connected with someone who looks like a good prospect for you, they might be pitching that person right now!
This might be a good time to introduce yourself via InMail (or you might have another first-degree connection who knows the prospect) and make sure the prospect knows about your services.
Conversely, this might be a reason not to connect with competitors on LinkedIn—it makes your new connections highly visible.

#3: Jump on Recommendations and Get Introduced

You can also filter the newsfeed by recommendations, although it’s a bit more manual. If someone just gave or received a recommendation, there’s a lot of positivity in that relationship and you have a better chance succeeding at an introduction to the person who made the recommendation.
Go to “More Views” and then the “Connection View” tab, and scroll to look for recommendations, or control-F to search the web page for “recommended.”
connections recommended
Recent recommendations are another way to find warm relationships.
If someone just gave or received a recommendation, there’s a lot of positivity in that relationship, and you have a better chance succeeding at an introduction to the person who made the recommendation.
introduction request
Ask for an introduction to the person who recommended your first-degree connection.

#4: Mine LinkedIn Groups and LinkedIn Answers for New Business

LinkedIn Groups and Answers are good places for you to find prospects and start relationships. Answer questions from people who are potential prospects—you can demonstrate your company’s relevance, value and expertise. It’s like a preliminary job interview.
You can also use LinkedIn Answers to ask questions that might draw prospects out of the woodwork. Ask them about their challenges, their frustrations and even what’s holding them back from pursuing the kind of solution you provide. Then start building a relationship with them.
answers
Create questions in LinkedIn Answers that boost your industry intelligence and drive business.
You can start a discussion in one of the LinkedIn Groups you’ve joined. Just be sure to be helpful, not salesy.
Focus on how you can add to the conversation. Don’t focus on your own company and its offerings. Remember that your profile has all that information in it. You can mention your company’s specialty, but it’s better to make that 10-20% of the content you share. Make sure the other 80-90% is about helping the other person solve his or her problems.
If your company hasn’t started its own LinkedIn Group, consider creating one.
A 2011 study by LeadFormix found that among LinkedIn visitors to websites, those who come from Groups and Ads are the most likely to fill out a lead form.
Get together with any marketers, social strategists, PR folks and salespeople who use LinkedIn as a marketing and sales tool, and brainstorm a topic that your company can “host” by creating a Group around it.
Think of it as a discussion board that exists virtually right outside your offices. The people who join and participate could be your future customers. And most importantly, the owner of a LinkedIn Group can email its members once a week. It’s as powerful as email marketing!

#5: Hunt for Prospects with Advanced Search

Advanced Search is one of the most exciting aspects of LinkedIn, but use it with care.
LinkedIn’s Advanced Search allows you to search LinkedIn for anyone, on many criteria, even if you don’t know them. You might need to request an introduction or send an InMail (if there’s cold-calling on LinkedIn, this is it).
advanced search options
These are just a few of the filters you can use with the Advanced People Search on LinkedIn.
When you start doing Advanced Searches, you’ll need to use your definition of what a high-quality lead is for you or your company:
  • Who are the buyers in the companies you sell to?
  • What’s their job title?
  • What’s their seniority level?
  • How big is their company?
  • Are they in specific industries?
For example, let’s say you sell solutions to CMOs in healthcare. This might lead you to select:
  • Industry: any health and medical industries
  • Seniority: higher seniority levels
  • Company size: between 200 and 5,000 people
This search gives me just 31 results. That’s pretty highly targeted prospecting! If I remove the health and medical, I get 805 people in my results.
search
Find people who meet your targeting criteria with Advanced People Search, and reach out to them.
It can take some trial and error to build a good search based on multiple criteria, so you’d better save all that effort. In the upper-right corner, click the green plus button to save your search.
As you build your search, watch the number of results and make sure you save your search before moving on to another activity.
Note: You get to choose from more criteria in Advanced Search (LinkedIn calls them “premium search filters”) if you subscribe monthly for a business account.
How do you know when you’ve narrowed down your search properly? Usually when the number of search results approximates the size of your real-world prospect list. There are a finite number of good prospects for your business.
In B2B, your target prospect list may include 500 or 5,000 or 50,000 companies, depending on many factors. If you sell copier paper, there are millions of prospects. Knowing that, now how many decision-makers are there in those target companies?

#6: Map the Target Company

If you’re following up on a lead from your company’s advertising or marketing campaigns, you may need to network your way through a company to find the “economic buyer” (final decision-maker) who will use the solution you’re selling and who might have influence over the purchasing decision.
You can go to the company’s LinkedIn page and take a look at its employees. What if you know one of them, or went to the same school?
Even if they aren’t the decision-maker you’re looking for, they might play a role as an advocate (what some sales professionals call a “coach”), give you information about corporate structure and recommend you deeper into the company.
Your advocate may only be a web designer (not your decision-maker), but maybe he goes to baseball games with the VP of marketing.
Network from the outside to the inside. The better relationship you can strike up with each person, the more likely you’ll get information or a recommendation closer to the economic buyer.
company pages
LinkedIn company pages show people who are in your network and who went to your alma mater. Leverage these relationships to fill your sales funnel.
You can also go to The Official Board if you’re targeting one of the 30,000 biggest corporations in the world.

#7: Reach Decision-Makers

First look at the LinkedIn company page and see which of the company’s employees you have as first-degree connections.
If you find people in the target company who are willing to help you, a positive conversation that demonstrates how you’ll help their company (and serve their interests) could lead to LinkedIn introductions to other folks in the company, or their phone numbers.
Even if you get the phone numbers directly from the last person you talked to, or from Data.com, you can use LinkedIn to look each person up and get to know a bit about them before calling.
You could get a formal LinkedIn introduction, and then call the next day.
Even if your new targets haven’t yet accepted your introduction or replied, if you have their phone numbers, you can call them and they’ll at least recognize you. You can also find employees in LinkedIn Groups. Strike up a conversation if they’ve posted.
These are just some strategies for prospecting on LinkedIn. Use these techniques or build on them to come up with your own innovative methods.
What do you think? How do you find prospects on LinkedIn? Have you used any techniques you would like to share with us? Please leave your comments in the box below.

3 Mobile Behaviors You Must Embrace Right Now

3 Mobile Behaviors You Must Embrace Right Now:



When marketing people start talking about mobile these days, and they’re doing it a lot, they usually default to tactics – mobile ads, SMS, throw in some near field communications and we’re on the mobile track.

Text Message Marketing
photo credit: Drriss via photo pin cc
I’ve been doing this a long time and with every emerging evolution there seems to be an equally reactive rush to embrace the accompanying tactics and it’s what leads people to do things that don’t make sense.
Ten years ago everyone was hiring web designers to create web sites that had nothing to do with the rest of the organization’s marketing or branding – but they had to have a web site.
Then social media came along and everyone rushed to figure out Twitter and how to run a contest on Facebook.
The mobile rush is currently starting to heat up and, once again, I think most people are asking the wrong thing.
Instead of how do wet get into mobile, where can we get our own cool app or how much should we spend on mobile ads, the question is and should be this.
What behaviors are our current customers exhibiting right now when it comes to mobile and how can we tap those behaviors using some combination of existing and emerging tools.
I truly believe that’s the formula for considering any new tactic or tool. When you factor what you’re doing now that works and ask how you can use the tools to do more of that, you’ll rarely get caught up in the rush towards new for new sake.
Below are three mobile behaviors you can no longer ignore as they’ve become universal and cross industries and demographics in undeniable ways.
1) Content is getting consumed on mobile devices on the go.
I have a Nexus7, iPhone, iPad, Kindle Fire. I use apps like Reeder and FlipBoard on most of those devices to consume content. And, while I’m not your average online folk, my wife does the same and so do my kids.
Our content must be made to be consumed by people using really small screens riding in a car, at the library and at the conference. Right now, there are very few business that can pull off a generally useful app, but every business should invest in making all of their content pitch perfect for the various ways it’s being consumed.
This means using plugins such as WPTouch Pro, choosing themes and designers that use Responsive Web Design and exploring mobile landing pages and content pages designed to provide very specific content to mobile surfers with tools such as Tekora or GoMobi
2) Mobile is a key element in the buying process
And, here’s the most important aspect of that behavior – mobile shoppers are proving more valuable then traditional shoppers, including demonstrating less price sensitivity according the July Mobile Retail Insights report from Mobile Ad Network Greystripe.
Okay this statement relies on murky research, but think about it – mobile shoppers, people that do research on the fly looking for somewhere to shop, eat, drink, visit, or even hire a service, are more likely to jump on the things they find first, conveniently and seamlessly.
While people are using their mobile devices during the buying or shopping process many are choosing to make actual purchases either offline (see next behavior) or using a laptop, but tablets are going to change this dramatically.
The key is to understand that mobile is a link in the buying chain and proper integration is where conversion comes from.
3) People expect mobile engagement
Once you understand this behavior you’ll stop bad mouthing text message marketing. That’s not to say that there aren’t people doing it poorly or using it to spam, but it is to say there are terribly powerful and valid reasons to use SMS and now is the time to analyze how you can use service such as EXTexting or Trumpia for customer service, flash sales and specials and appointment opening.
I’ve also seen people use SMS short codes to allow people to subscribe to their email newsletter and more and more businesses are offering receipts by way of email and text.
I allow people to download slides from my speaking events, something they would often ask me to do anyway, by sending a short code text to a specific number. This particular process allows them to get what they want when they want it without much work and certainly takes me out of the process as well.
Enabling mobile engagement through tools such a click to call, click to chat or click for driving directions is another way to help people get what they want in the highly impatient, highly motivated world of mobile commerce.
I think the key to understanding any new technology or tactic is pretty simple. First figure out how you can use it to make something your customer is already doing easier and better. If you can do that it doesn’t matter how you see others using it or not.

3 Mobile Behaviors You Must Embrace Right Now is a post from: Small Business Marketing Blog from Duct Tape Marketing

mercredi 1 août 2012

Switchers, la nouvelle web-série évènement made in Morocco



Découvrez le premier épisode de cette web-série marocaine.

Un premier teaser qui annonçait la couleur.

Switchers est la toute nouvelle web-série proposée par l'opérateur téléphonique marocain INWI. Après un premier teaser qui donnait envie d'en découvrir plus, un premier épisode a été mis en ligne sur le site web de la série. Bien réalisée, et pleine de suspens, la web-série devrait trouver assez vite son public.

L'histoire est celle d'Amine, un étudiant sans ambition qui va se retrouver embarqué dans une aventure aux rebondissements inattendus, tout cela pour les beaux yeux d'Anissa, la fille de son coeur.

Facebook utiliserait des bots pour cliquer sur les publicités que vous payez

Voilà un témoignage bien inquiétant qui vient d'être publié par Limited Run, une plateforme e-commerce américaine renommée qui offre à ses utilisateurs la possibilité de créer leur propre boutique en ligne, moyennant un abonnement mensuel (je ne cautionne pas ce genre de système, mais il s'agit d'un autre débat).

Le site a décidé de mettre un terme à sa présence sur Facebook, après avoir réalisé que le réseau social le plus célèbre du monde flouait ses clients, ceux qui payent des publicités et qui le font vivre.

20120730 02 Facebook utiliserait des bots pour cliquer sur les publicités que vous payez

Vous avez tous déjà été énervés par ces blocs publicitaires dans la colonne droite de Facebook, avouez-le. Il s'avère qu'en plus de nous polluer visuellement, et d'augmenter le volume de cette « spamicité » (il y a quelques jours, la limite est passé de 6 à 10 publicités potentielles par page), on apprend donc que Facebook triche en simulant des clics sur ses propres publicités, afin d'augmenter artificiellement ses revenus.

Je rappelle que n'importe quel utilisateur Facebook peut lancer sa campagne publicitaire, nous y sommes d'ailleurs fréquemment encouragés. Et pour chaque clic sur notre publicité diffusée dans Facebook, il faut payer quelques centimes en échange, avec notre carte de crédit.

Voici ce que nous explique Limited Run sur cette page (qui va certainement disparaitre très vite) :

Bonjour à tous, nous allons supprimer notre page Facebook dans les semaines à venir, mais nous voulions d'abord vous en expliquer la raison. Il y a deux mois, pour promouvoir le lancement de notre nouveau site, nous avions choisi de tester les publicités Facebook (Facebook Ads). Malheureusement, durant ce test, nous avons observé d'étranges phénomènes.

Facebook nous a facturé des clics, dont 20% seulement étaient vérifiables sur les statistiques de notre site. Au début, nous avons mis en doute notre système de statistiques. Nous avons alors utilisé plusieurs autres outils très réputés dans le domaine, mais il était toujours impossible de vérifier plus de 15-20% de nos clics.

Alors en bons développeurs, nous avons conçu notre propre logiciel d'analyse de trafic. Et voici ce qui ressort des résultats : Pour 80% des clics que Facebook nous a facturés, JavaScript n'était pas activé sur les navigateurs clients. Dans ces conditions, il est très difficile pour un outil de statistiques d'analyser les clics publicitaires. Ce qu'il est important de savoir, c'est que nous avons constaté durant nos années d'expérience un taux de 1-2% de visiteurs utilisant un navigateur avec JavaScript désactivé, et pas 80% comme les visiteurs issus de Facebook.

Nous avons alors développé un logger de page, afin de garder une trace de toute page chargée. Savez-vous ce que nous avons trouvé ? 80% des clics que nous payons, et donc des visiteurs issus de Facebook, était des bots (robots) ! Vous avez bien lu. Des bots constituaient ce trafic et dilapidaient nos crédits Facebook.

Alors nous avons contacté Facebook à ce sujet, mais ils n'ont pas voulu répondre. Est-ce que nous savons à qui appartiennent ces bots ? Non. Avons-nous accusé Facebook d'utiliser ces bots pour augmenter virtuellement ses revenus ? Non. Est-ce étrange ? Oui. Mais passons outre, car il est impossible de prouver à qui appartiennent ces bots.

Pendant cette phase de tests, nous avions aussi demandé à Facebook le droit de changer le nom de notre page, car celui de notre société avait également changé. Après de nombreux messages, nous avons reçu un appel de Facebook. Un employé nous a informé que le changement serait possible. Super ! Mais seulement si nous acceptions de dépenser 2000$/mois en plus dans leurs publicités. Sans rire. Facebook tenait simplement notre nom en otage. Alors nous avons réagi plus durement, et maudit cette * »#+*/~. Nous n'en sommes toujours pas revenus ! Voilà pourquoi nous devons supprimer cette page et quitter Facebook définitivement. Ce sont des crétins et nous n'avons pas la patience de les supporter.

20120730 01 Facebook utiliserait des bots pour cliquer sur les publicités que vous payez

Voilà, je vous avais prévenus, c'est très chaud.

Je me trompe peut être, mais tout ce qui se passe autour de Facebook ces jours-ci fleure l'explosion de la bulle internet dans les années 2000. Alors oui, je suis un vieux de la vieille et je vous parle d'un temps que les moins de 20MB ne peuvent pas connaitre, n'empêche que c'est bien la première fois qu'on entend autant de critiques et de mauvaises nouvelles à propos de Facebook.

Tout a commencé depuis son introduction en bourse, avec des valeurs bien inférieures aux prévisions, puis une dégringolade à peine stabilisée, une utilisation à outrance de la publicité et maintenant ce genre d'histoires… What's next ?


http://www.kris3d.com/2012/07/30/facebook-utiliserait-des-bots-pour-cliquer-sur-les-publicites-que-vous-payez/

[New Ebook] 6 Ways to Generate Leads with Google+





Are you looking for new ways to get leads, Google+ can be an effective lead-generation tool if you follow the best practices to make the most out of this new social network.

Grab our latest ebook to learn what Google+ lead generation means, how to track it, and what an optimized Google+ business page looks like. The ebook features insights and suggestions from the Google+ team itself, so you are about to get access to top-notch information.

Download Your Free Ebook Now

The ebook explores how you can drive new leads for your business using the following Google+ features:

1. Content updates
2. Images & video
3. Google Circles
4. AdWords campaigns with social extensions
5. Embedding the +1 button
6. Google+ Events & Hangouts






Download your complimentary ebook
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Socialize and grow your blog with Google+

Socialize and grow your blog with Google+

Posted: 30 Jul 2012 06:01 PM PDT

Blogger lets you share your thoughts, grow your readership, and engage with your audience. But we want to make Blogger even better by letting you tap into the growing Google+ community. Today, we're adding a new "Google+" tab in the Blogger dashboard, so you now have a central place to start growing your blog with Google+. This means you can now:

Connect your blog to a Google+ profile or page
If you blog under your own name, you've already been able to associate your blog with your personal Google+ profile.  Starting today, you can now connect your blog to a Google+ page for your brand, business or organization.


Notify followers when you publish, and let them recommend your content
Each time you post on your blog, we'll show you a Google+ share box to let you notify followers that you have new blog content.  If they like what you share, followers can +1 or reshare your post to their own friends on Google+. This ripple effect exposes links to your content to a wider audience.

Build enduring connections with your audience
Adding the Google+ gadget to your blog makes it easy for people to add your profile or page to their circles when they like something you've published. Forming connections with readers that last after they've left your blog is essential.  

To get started, click the "Google+" tab in the Blogger dashboard and then the "Upgrade" button. If you've already upgraded to Google+, we'll help you associate your blog with your profile or page.


We'll be introducing more settings on this tab in the future, so stay tuned for additional ways to get more out of Blogger with Google+.  If you have questions, you can learn more in our Help Center.

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