29 July 2011 7 Comments

Best social media podcast I have heard – marketers get on board

Best social media podcast I have heard – marketers get on board

Run to itunes now and download Mitch’s podcast.

Welcome to episode #159 of Six Pixels Of Separation – The Twist Image Podcast. This is a very special episode. I was asked to be the Guest Editor for the June 15th, 2009 issue of Marketing Magazine (titled Brave New World). The magazine’s cover story is a roundtable discussion I conducted on the future of Digital Marketing featuring: Seth GodinCharlene LiShelly Palmer and David Weinberger titled,Talkin’ About A Revolution. The entire audio conversation is available for you right here in this episode. It’s fascinating, heated and full of energy. Enjoy the conversation.

Here is my comment after listening:

Wow. Do I feel good! I was already filled with excitement and couldn’t sleep this week and now I get it. I am a marketing consultant that has been set free from the confines of corporate marketing and now, just at the right time, am able to use my imagination and innovation to collide! This is fantastic opportunity in marketing as Shelly explained. We have these new tools and environment to have a conversation with our customers, earn their respect, and attention and very quickly establish small businesses in a way that has never been possible. I totally get this because I have always approached marketing from “it’s all about the customer” and now we have the tools to do it better, cheaper and faster than ever before. We have to be ourselves and earn the right to form a relationship, as we would treat any friend. Our interaction and value is only limited by our creativity. Thanks Mitch, you and your guests have confirmed this excitement for me and I look forward to even more insomnia as I plan my next social marketing experiment.

5 June 2011 1 Comment

Ten Tips To Curating Content As A Small Business

Content creation isn’t about being first but it is about contributing new insights.

Author  Steven Rosenbaum’s Book Curation Nation is based on the premise that we are all able to enter the conversation. We are all curating content all the time. Deciding what is valuable and  what is junk. We might not all blog, video, text or tweet about it publicly, but we are all making decisions and trade-offs about what we spend our time on and what we ignore.

For me, creating content it is really about quality not quantity of the information.  It is not about finding but sorting information. It is also about the creative process of finding things that I really am interested in and weaving together a commentary for other like minded individuals, like you reading this blog!  Content I create also expresses my brand so I am now more an more careful about the content I publish than I was say 3 years ago. The process of creating content however while it might be based around curating information, there still has to be that creative process injecting just my point of view or spin on things. Let’s face it many marketers write on these topics, so surely it is their particular spin on the information, personality or style that has readers coming back for more. So I say context is king!

Why do I like to listen to Gary Vaynerchuk? It is not just his enthusiasm but his take on things. Same with Guy Kawaski, Seth or John Jantsch. It is their view of the world that I am buying into, as much as the content itself. It is my enchantment with their take on things.

So what does all this  mean for you and I as  the small business owner. Well finding content is easy. Google a topic and it is there in front of you in many varied forms. Sourcing what is relevant, important, simulating, valuable and interesting for your audience takes curation. Steven Rosenbaum believes that  the key to “growing an existing business or starting a new one is being a human aggregator.” Human is important because it implies you need to be involved. You need to pull together the best information and create a conversation.

Here are my 10 tips on how to engage in the process of curating content for your small business.

1. Write down the problems your customers face in your business niche. Start sourcing answers, solutions, templates and tools that you can share.

John Jantsch - Duct Tape Marketing

2. Look up the thought-leaders in your space and keep on-top of their conversations. Write a commentary about that they are saying.

3. Ask you customers for feedback about your product or service and share the insights and what you are going to do about the feedback.

4. Create a survey for your niche and share the content.

5. Read books in your area of expertise and do a review for your customers.

Seth - Marketing Thought Leader

6. Look at multimedia insights and have a media library of resources

7. Create a list of how to videos, some you create and some curated.

8. Interview the best minds in your field and make a podcast

9. Next time you do a presentation share it in slide share or video it for sharing

 

 

10. Use tools to aggregate your insights so you can find key information fast. I like Alltop for blogs and RSS, google alerts, twilert and Flipboard for my ipad (yeah I am a geek).

11.My last bonus point is more about your brand. Protect it. Inject a bit of you when you right. Your humour, your language, your personality. After all we are writing for each other and trying to make a connection. This is a whole lot easier when we are ourselves.

Funny ad I found

 

 

 

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3 May 2011 7 Comments

Seth Godin – online presentation

Seth Godin – online presentation

For anyone in marketing this video is a must.

Seth Godin Spread good ideas utube vid.

25 November 2010 1 Comment

Build your small business from the inside out. Personal development is the best investment you can make!

My favorite thought leaders all sprout about it.They are all over this concept of understanding yourself and then building from that point a solid foundations of a personal and then company brand. Some call this self awareness, self actualisation, understanding your mindset, inner core, your value system or inner believes.

Tom Peters, Dr Stephen Covey, Michael Port, Jeanne  Bliss, Chris Brogan, Gary Vanderchuk, Seth or John DiJulius. What do all of them have in common? I believe that they have grasped the fundamental starting point for a small business to be successful.The key is simple; know yourself and the values you bring on board as the owner. It is your very values that determine how your  business culture, how you interact with staff and customers and influences the decisions you make. It seems like a small thing, but believe me, self awareness is underrated as a powerful differentiators when building a successful company.

Building this culture, this underlying feeling, buzz, atmosphere, that is so hard to replicate, is integral to building your brand and attracting your ideal customers. Building your small business should start with you. It has too. Understanding you and your values and then building your business from that core base. It is these attributes that inevitably shape your brand.

A word of caution. When I have worked with small business owners haven’t fully understood or resolved from their core values, their businesses always have problems. The cracks start to show very early with staff and then customer relationships. Not only is it difficult to run a great business when your values aren’t clear and communicated but it is more difficult it is to market and position a business where the personality is not crystal clear and this is determined by behavior and values. You need to be authentic. I think the larger questions for you is, how well do we really know yourself. Personal development is one of the best business investments a small business owner can make.Understanding yourself, your staff and your customers.

How can we learn from some of the thought leaders who understand the concept of being authentic and true to their inner calling and values. Take a walk with me through some of the influencers in my life since running my business.

Of course all the above mentioned thought leaders are a brand in their own right but they didn’t start out that way. Take for example Gary Vanderchuk. Personally I love Gary, but not everyone does. I love his authenticity. What you see is what you get. I value of authenticity resonates with me. He reminds me of my sister Nat who is so open and black and white about things. This trait of Gary’s for being frank, coupled with his enthusiasm and energy (not to mention a lot of elbow grease) has catapulted his brand and his Wine TV show to legendary status. He has been true to his inner voice, warts and all and attracted raving fans because it it. Now he is not for everyone, but it is clear that he stands for something.

I highly recommend his book Crush it to get you all pumped and make you not sleep because you think you have been too slack, but a great read.What do you think your staff say about you? Your customers?

Jeanne Bliss has a great website called Customer Bliss. Great videos on this website. It is clear to me that Jeanne has innate empathy for people. She just gets it. She understands the value of being customer centric. She talks about “your story”. What is being said about you because of the decisions you make and the actions  you take. Bringing this level of self awareness to business is a much needed area of business development. This “software” that Tom Peter talks of, is often overlooked. Yet as a small business owner “your story” is even more important because the relationships we form with our customers are often more intimate than in larger businesses. Did I mention that the About Us page is the top searched page on most websites. People buy off people they like, know and trust. What does your website say about you, your story?

Dr Stephen Covey has always approached his area of expertise from a pragmatic approach and uses human psychology and compelling story telling to package his teachings. The reason he is so successful is he has followed his inner voice to do what he does best and that is to teach. Even today he is using more an more mediums to communicate his learning to others. His 7 Now 8,habits are principles to live by and are ingrained in his value set. Intrinsically, we know that they make sense and appeal to our better nature as they are simple concepts. However, it is Dr Covey story telling that brings these concepts to live. The “green and clean” story will stay with me for life a story about how he taught his son to look after the lawn and take responsibility for something at a young age.

Dr Stephen Covey

I have only recently discovered Michael Port and recently read his book on audible How to book yourself solid. Michael is clearly a very nice person. He cares. Full stop. He has invested so much of himself to build his consulting business and the reason he is so successful and will continue to be is that he is invested. His latest venture called

Think Big Revolution – it is all about thinking bigger  about who you are and what you offer the world. It is a really great premise because it is a mindset of abundance which I love and a Pay it Forward mentality which is equally appealing to me. Michael is a successful businessman and entrepreneur no doubt but I bet he measures part of his success in the way he is able to serve others which is why this is part of his story.

Michael Port

It is why he does a 1 hour collaborative coaching session for small businesses very week. You have got to love that and what he stands for. What do you do for your customers that shows them that you care?

Chris Brogan is known as a great blogger. I really love the way he shows so much of himself in this blogs and even better his u-tubes. Love his book reviews. Chris has positioning himself as a social media expert but has a totally human practical approach to his view point. Kind of like John Jantsch from Duck Tape Marketing. Great practical advice. He has started a business called Human Systems Works. Wow Chris. Go get them. What I love about this is community focused. There is no real material gain, it is just a nice, and dare I say the right thing to do.

So what does MacInnis Marketing stand for? Well if you look on Our story page you will see the values that resonate for me

  • Authentic – being  honest, being ourselves and doing our best to deliver you with the best marketing solution for your business.
  • Passion for customers – being thoughtful by putting your needs first. By being personally invested by ensuring we deliver great value for your marketing dollar investment.
  • Innovation and IT - keeping abreast of current marketing IT solutions and identifying the most affordable and suitable marketing technology for your small business.
  • Sharing Knowledge – educating and communicating marketing information with you to improve your marketing knowledge and skill base.
  • Creativity and fun – brainstorming, thinking outside the square, enjoying the process and constantly collecting great ideas for marketing in small business.
  • Try to use the pay it forward principals -It begins with doing a favor for another person– without any expectation of being paid back.

I guess anyone can put values up on their website or have a mission statement but it is how they embody those values day to day that really matters. These values guide the work we do and the work we choose not to do. I make decisions in my business every day guided my these.  A perfect example is my latest project Brain Jam where I am helping young marketers get some real practical marketing experience by coaching mentoring and giving them some hands on experience. For me this ticks all the boxes.

TAKE AWAY - The key take away for you is to look at the values that you live your life by and ask yourself are you using these in your business? Are you being true to your inner core beliefs? If so, how can you action these even more fully so they make a real different to your staff and customers everyday? Love to hear your story!