Facebook Fan Page Best Practices

June 20, 2011 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Facebook Fan PagesI have been managing a couple of brand’s fan pages directly for some time – Savvy Cellar Wines (which I’m a Co-Owner of) for over two years and Organic Wine Review (which was video blog launched last year).  My consulting practice SmokeJumper Strategy is increasing being called upon to assist software and Internet companies with their social media and marketing strategy, which inevitably includes Facebook.  I was also recently asked by Facebook to become an Advisor to their Local product and marketing efforts.

During this time, I’ve experimented with many aspects of managing a fan page for a small & local businesses:  from times to post, different media types and observing and measuring what types of posts seem to drive social interaction.  Along the way, we’ve managed to grow our fan base (now at 2,100), hopefully engage them in a positive way and taken advantage of the advances Facebook has engineered into their tools and apps for fan pages, their advertising platform and their analytics to measure audiences and responses to actions.

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Social Marketing Best Practices | A Planning Checklist

April 29, 2011 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Social Media MarketingAs I worked through assessing a new client’s existing social marketing efforts, I turned my attention to assembling a set of best practices to rate them against.  In preliminary search of existing data on the subject, I was pleased to find one of my clients, Marketo a leader in B2B marketing automation, had published a practical guide to social media marketing:  The Definitive Guide to B2B Social Media.

Within section 2 of the guide, “Laying the Foundation”, there is a very practical checklist outlining what a company must be prepared to undertake in order to market using social media effectively.  I have taken that list and extended some of the concepts, added a couple more and simplified others.

The result is a Social Marketing Best Practices Planning Checklist.

1)  Establish clear goals for social marketing.

  • Be specific.
  • Keep objectives in mind for every initiative executed.

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Fanminder | 5 Questions for Paul Rosenfeld & Tracy Grover

February 10, 2011 by admin · 1 Comment 

paul rosenfeldI met Paul Rosenfeld last year when he came to pitch Savvy Cellar Wine Bar & Wine Shop before it opened in Mountain View, CA on the merits of his new mobile marketing service called Fanminder.  Always being one to extend and try new things and wanting to dip our toe into the mobile world, I said yes (plus Paul is very passionate and convincing).  He is the Co-Founder and CEO of Fanminder.  He spent about 15 years working for two of the best companies catering to small businesses — American Express and Intuit. At American Express Paul helped lead its first gift card program for merchants and worked in the Small Business Services division. At Intuit, he was General Manager QuickBooks Merchant Account Service; QuickBooks Online Edition; and led development of the FinanceWorks online banking suite.

tracy groverTracy Grover is Co-Founder and COO of Fanminder.  Most recently, Tracy was Vice President of Product Management for AccountNow. Previously she served as Director of Marketing for LoopNet, which automates online marketing tools for small real estate businesses to help them compete with the big guys.  Before that Tracy built, launched, and marketed online banking solutions for small businesses (for Bank of America & Silicon Valley Bank), a secure mobile application used by doctors & public officials (Certicom) and the first mass market online credit card, NextCard.

I recently sat down with Paul and Tracy and fired off 5 questions for them . . . .

1) What was the genesis of Fanminder?

Paul:  Tracy and I started Fanminder literally in the teeth of the recession, in October 2008. We had very good paying jobs – I was the Chief Marketing Officer and Tracy was the VP Product Management for a local start-up. We saw how all the larger, Fortune-sized retailers were rushing into mobile and social marketing but when we “walked down main street” we didn’t see any local businesses doing anything.

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