Tag Archives: brazil

Target Twitter audiences of every size with a theory of everyone

6873782601 dfa737da68 m Target Twitter audiences of every size with a theory of everyone

Photo credit: Fora do Eixo

Well, as you all know who read this blog, I am a Cluetrainian. This means I believe that anyone who spends their time and talent online are online influencers and potential important brand ambassadors. Marketers balk with visions of lost dollar signs, especially when the in-house social media communications professional generally balances email newsletter, traditional PR and site copy. Marketers forget that influencers aren’t necessary partial to the brand, with the loyalty of a salary or paycheck. They may, shocker, actually be genuinely interested in the topic.

Leveraging the brand’s equity to build one’s own brand is common, a fame narcotic if you will. While I encourage each one of my colleagues to build their own brand equity I need them to maintain egalitarian and democratic values when engaging online on behalf of clients. I don’t want them to lose their tone and voice, I just want them to filter it depending on the audience.

Don’t know where to start? Well, I know for a fact that there’s a guy in Brazil who will hook you up with thousands of Brazilian tweeters almost immediately for a fee. That’s somewhere to start. Once you’ve bought your online friends, you have to deliver the je ne sais quois to keep them. If you suck, are salesy, don’t tweet or post very often, are selfish, don’t play games or bait conversation, don’t give til it hurts, even all of these thousands of purchased followers will start unfollowing you almost immediately.

It is sort of like being an opening act to U2: you might have 30,000 folks who didn’t come to see you who are there to see Bono but there’s no guarantee that they’ll ever buy your album. There’s every reason they should but you really could make a mess of it — if they don’t, it is your fault as they were your customers to lose. Same thing with buying followers and likes. If the targeting is completely off, if you suck as a host, or if you’re boring or rude, they’re gone — at least the real ones are.

Stated simply, the state of the art in social media is still bespoke, based on old models of public relations where each particular PR agent has a Rolodex and that card represents years and years of personal relationships . Very precious and personal connections, formed and tempered over time, built on trust.

And, this very same framework has been mapped directly into social media where many agencies and companies spend all of their time taking their current 25 mainstream media contacts and 25 social media contacts to dinners at Mortons. There’s not enough budget or time to prospect much further or deeper than that.

Which is a sincere pity.

How can one take an old PR model that only concerns itself with an easy-to-manage elite core of gate-keeping journalists, publishers, and broadcasters and map that onto a new media model? A model that could potentially include anyone and everyone who should decide to commit to starting blogging. Producing content for online consumption, resulting in becoming an online influencer. It’s like the circle of success.

In this theory of everyone, in this theory of long tail digital PR outreach and engagement, it is essential to find viable ways of 1) discovering everyone — because there are potentially a lot of people that show up in your net when you’re being inclusive and indiscriminate 2) keeping that list up-to-date as blogs are launched and shuttered every day.

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Spotlight on Abraham Harrison Case Study- BrandsClub

Abraham Harrison works with such a wide variety of cool services, people and products. Marketing Conversation has decided its about time its readers knew about them and the impact that Abraham Harrison continues to have as a marketing and PR team.

Challenge:

brandsclub Spotlight on Abraham Harrison Case Study  BrandsClubBrandsclub, a private online fashion buying club, was having difficulties with its delivery processes. This was leading to large amounts negative sentiment toward the company spreading across social networking sites and the blogosphere, seriously undermining the company’s brand, their growth, and their customer retention.

Abraham Harrison’s challenge was three-fold: turn negative sentiment into positive, drive new users to the Brandsclub website, and provide ROI though higher customer satisfaction, retention, and activity.

Brandsclub, now the leading private sales club in Brazil, operates 100% online and a strong, positive presence on the internet is pivotal for the company’s success.

Abraham Harrison took a daily deluge of public complaints and turned it into a chorus of enthusiastic praise and loyal championing of the client’s brand.

Strategy/Tactics:

  • Leverage blogger influence to increase awareness and good sentiment, and constantly support customers on social networks by taking a position of transparency and willingness.
  • The team at Abraham Harrison implemented a comprehensive, multi-staged and highly targeted blogger outreach campaign to encourage bloggers to share information about Brandsclub.
  • Over 5,000 bloggers were contacted during 8 outreach efforts. Every response was personally followed up by a member of the AH team.
  • On social networking sites, thorough research of the competition was conducted, daily monitoring of conversations took place, and thoughtful strategies for content generation were put in place to gain and capture internet users attention longer

Results:

  • Drastically increased brand awareness via online mentions and strengthened presence in social media. 100,000+ followers on the Twitter handles created by Abraham Harrison and over 50,000 “Likes” on their Facebook page.
  • In addition to the initial followers and “Likes”, there were tens of thousands of fans interacting with the brand on the various handles. Generating thousands of impressions daily.
  • On average the Brandsclub handle was seeing 200 fan interactions daily.

Testimonial:

Abraham & Harrison has been doing a terrific job for brandsclub. Not only have they created and managed our twitter account, that has the most followers in the world for our business model, their outreaches have gotten us tons of responses. Last but not least they are always coming up with great suggestions and worldwide contacts for any crazy idea you might come up with. I would recommend them to anyone!”

- Olivier Grinda, Co-Founder and CMO, BrandsClub

Visit the Abraham Harrison Website for Slideshare presentations and other case studies.

 Spotlight on Abraham Harrison Case Study  BrandsClub

Build followers using a theory of everyone

500x rodolex hlarge Build followers using a theory of everyoneWell, as you all know who read this blog, I am Cluetrainian. This means I put more trust in the value and impact of the online influencer long tail than I do in the impact of the couple-dozen top-influencers that most social media consultants and digital PR teams recommend. This is the Internet, an efficient platform allowing easy access to what’s called the network effect: the value of your social network is dependent on the number of others using it. While it may well be important to have the top-100 influencers on any particular topic following you on Twitter or Facebook, it is not essential. You can make up for it by attracting, retaining, and activating everyone else as well. This means I believe that anyone who shares her time, talent, and experience online is an important online influencer and potential brand ambassador for my clients.

How do you get lots and lots of people to follow your brand? Don’t know where to start? Firstly, make sure you share your Twitter and Facebook information everywhere your brand exists in the real world or in cyberia. You could spend months and months developing these lists and groups of followers, encouraging folks to RT your content and so forth.

Of course, you can always buy loads and loads of Twitter followers, popping you from your current 2,500 to 25,000 within a month. Yes, I said it. You can buy tens and hundreds of thousands of followers both on Twitter and on Facebook. But, I will tell you now that the followers are generally spammy, poorly-targeted, and they often bail the moment they decide you’re unworthy.

I know for a fact that there’s a guy in Brazil who will hook you up with thousands of Brazilian tweeters almost immediately for a fee. There are dozens of folks who do it and you just need to do a little searching on Google to find them all. That’s somewhere to start. Once you’ve bought your online friends — lots and lots of them — you have to deliver the je ne sais quois to keep them.

Mind you, just because you’re cheating with the acquisition doesn’t mean you’re out of the woods. There’s still a lot of hard work. If you suck, are salesy, don’t tweet or post very often, are selfish, don’t play games or bait conversation, don’t give til it hurts — all the hard work you should have been doing with your small cadre of top-influencers — even all of these thousands of purchased followers will start unfollowing you almost immediately.

You had them until you lost them.

It is sort of like being the opening act to U2: you might have 30,000 folks who didn’t come to see you who are there to see Bono, so there’s no guarantee that they’ll ever buy your album. There’s every reason they should but you really could make a mess of it — if they don’t, it is your fault as they were your customers to lose. Same thing with buying followers and likes. If the targeting is completely off, if you suck as a host, or if you’re boring or rude, they’re gone — at least the real ones are.

Stated simply, the state of the art in social media is still bespoke, based on old models of public relations where each particular PR agent has a Rolodex and that card represents years and years of personal relationships. Very precious and personal connections, formed and tempered over time, built on trust.

And, this very same framework has been mapped directly into social media where many agencies and companies spend all of their time taking their current 25 mainstream media contacts and 25 social media contacts to dinners at Morton’s. There’s not enough budget or time to prospect much further or deeper than that.

Which is a sincere pity.

How can one take an old PR model that only concerns itself with an easy-to-manage elite core of gate-keeping journalists, publishers, and broadcasters and map that onto a new media model? A model that could potentially include anyone and everyone who should decide to commit to starting blogging. Producing content for online consumption, resulting in becoming an online influencer. It’s the circle of success.

In this theory of everyone, in this theory of long-tail digital PR outreach and engagement, it is essential to find viable ways of 1) discovering everyone — because there are potentially a lot of people that show up in your net when you’re being inclusive and indiscriminate 2) keeping up — because the amount of engagement explodes when you go from a few thousand to tens-of-thousands, be it curating comments, unfollowing and blocking spammers, checking your direct message inbox for relevant and timely requests or queries, and judiciously checking for retweets, @replies, and mentions and engaging them appropriately and in a timely manner.

Finally, don’t forget to thank everyone online who helps you no matter how “small” because if you choose to use a theory of everyone in your social media strategy, you can’t only be polite, kind, generous, and patient to the celebrities, you need to be kind and responsive to everyone, all the time. (Via Biznology and Socialmedia.biz)

Continue reading

Target Twitter followers using a theory of everyone

300px Rolodex.agr Target Twitter followers using a theory of everyone

Image via Wikipedia

Well, as you all know who read this blog, I am Cluetrainian. This means I put more trust in the value and impact of the online influencer long tail than I do in the impact of the couple-dozen top-influencers that most social media consultants and digital PR teams recommend. This is the Internet, an efficient platform allowing easy access to what’s called the network effect: the value of your social network is dependent on the number of others using it.  While it may well be important to have the top-100  influencers on any particular topic following you on Twitter or Facebook, it is not essential.  You can make up for it by attracting, retaining, and activating everyone else as well. This means I believe that anyone who shares her time, talent, and experience online is an important online influencer and potential brand ambassador for my clients. Continue reading

BrandsClub Promotion Case Study

Reached 100,000 followers on Twitter, 19,000 Likes on Facebook and millions of impressions through Blogger Outreaches

Brands Club Logo 300x252 BrandsClub Promotion Case StudyChallenge: Raise brand awareness, provide customer support and produce measurable results through the use of Social Media.

Brandsclub, the leading private sales club in Brazil, operates 100% online and a strong presence on the internet was essential for the company’s success. In addition to increasing its customer base, Brandsclub was having difficulties with its delivery process, causing negative sentiments to spread all over the social networking sites and blogs.

Abraham Harrison’s challenge was three-fold: drive new users to the Brandsclub website, turn the negative sentiment into positive and track results to highlight the positive ROI.

Strategy/Tactics: Leverage blogger influence to increase awareness and good sentiment, constantly support customers on social networks by taking a position of transparency and willingness.

The team at Abraham Harrison implemented a comprehensive, multi-staged and highly targeted blogger outreach to encourage bloggers to share information about Brandsclub and its uniqueness.

Over 5,000 bloggers were contacted during the 8 outreach efforts. With the personal touch of having a team member follow up with every single response, hundreds of mentions were earned.

On social networking sites, the process also required that 1- A full research of all conversations surrounding Brandsclub and its competitors was executed. 2- A strategy to daily monitoring surrounding these keywords was drafted and executed. 3- Different methods were used to gain the attention of internet users and keep the content increasingly interesting.

By carefully executing strategic steps and engage people into the social presence of Brandsclub, Abraham Harrison was able to put its reporting tools to use and show extremely impressive results.

Results: 100,000 followers on Twitter, 19,000 Likes on Facebook and millions of blog-generated impressions.

The number of followers and likes are just as impressive as the tens of thousands of positive tweets surrounding Brandsclub and the average of 200 interactions per day, triggering thousands of impressions daily.

 BrandsClub Promotion Case Study

The truth about Social Media in Latin America

We have been talking about the growth of social media in Latin America and now that some exciting numbers came in, let’s check out the quantitative truth behind all of our qualitative hype about these markets.

According to “Inside Facebook”,  Latin American Facebook users grew by more than 10% from last November. The stats also point out that Argentina has the most FB users although Brazil is the country with the most potential due to the current growth rates and number of internet users. We have experienced this growth first hand through our two big clients operating heavily in Brazil. Mexico also shows great potential due to its current low penetration rate and large population.

Latin America1 The truth about Social Media in Latin America

Another very interesting research was made by Paris-based Semiocast, pointing out that only 50% of all tweets are in English. Although Twitter is still a young emergent in social media around the globe, different countries are showing great potential, specially…….. That’s right, Latin America. Coming in 3rd on the number of tweets the study shows the Portuguese language (majority coming from Brazil) and 5th is the Spanish.  The two main languages of Latin America account for 13% of all tweets which means that on average, there are 4.5 million tweets in Portuguese and 2 million tweets in Spanish per day.

Picture 11 300x250 The truth about Social Media in Latin America

This all means that Abraham & Harrison is on the right track when it comes to anticipating for the latest international trends. We all know that the Asian market presents great opportunity for many different industries, but when it comes to the openness required by Social Media, Latin America presents the perfect setting. Latin America is quickly becoming a considerable piece of the Social Media pie and there’s already plenty of hungry companies out there.

 The truth about Social Media in Latin America

My Client OLX Expands to São Paulo, Brazil

300px Minhas imagens My Client OLX Expands to São Paulo, Brazil
Image via Wikipedia

We’re all pretty excited about how well our client, Fabrice Grinda, and his online classifieds site, OLX, is doing. So well, in fact, that they just opened a new office in São Paulo, Brazil.  Kudos to the gang at OLX global and especially to the Latin American offices in Argentina and now Brazil.

Our Client, Global Classifieds Giant OLX Expands in Brazil

Huge Growth Expected in Leading Latin American Online Market

SAO PAULO, BRAZIL – (February 4, 2010) – OLX, already present online in 90 countries, has announced the opening of a new office in Brazil. OLX.com.br has grown by 450% in the last two years and already counts 14 million visits per month in Brazil, with more than 1 million published items. The online classifieds company expects continued strong growth, aiming for 20 millions visits per month in 2010.

“The new office complements OLX’s presence in Latin America and allows us to be closer to our local clients, create marketing action plans and provide better technical support and stronger client relationships,” says Rodrigo Ribeirão, head of operations of the new Brazilian unit. Through those efforts, OLX anticipates attracting an even bigger Brazilian customer base, advertising and buying and selling online.

OLX offers seven categories of ads: real estate; autos, motorcycles and boats; community; classes; jobs; meeting people and services. The market for autos, real estate and jobs has the highest demand, representing more than 1 million ads published in Brazil and around 40 million around the world.

OLX sees Brazil as a very promising market since the country already has 67 million internet users and 14 million of them visit the OLX.com.br site every month. “We see Brazil as one of the most attractive online markets in the world. With the largest and most mature online market in Latin America, our goal in having a local presence is to better understand the Brazilian internet user and adapt our products to the needs and preferences of the local buyer and seller. Furthermore, with the opening of the Brazilian office, we expect our local activities to grow by 175% in the next two years, reaching 3.5 million active ads on the site,” explains Alec Oxenford, founder and CEO of OLX.

About OLX

OLX is the next generation of free online classifieds. OLX is used in over 90 countries in 40 languages. The company was co-founded in March 2006 by Internet entrepreneurs Fabrice Grinda and Alec Oxenford. OLX is privately held. The company is based in New York, NY and Buenos Aires, Argentina and operates two leading online classifieds networks hosted at www.olx.com and www.mundoanuncio.com. For more information, visit: www.olx.com.br

CONTACT:

Fabrice Grinda
Co-CEO
OLX, Inc.
#(917) 371.5441
fabrice@olx.com

 My Client OLX Expands to São Paulo, Brazil

Global Classifieds Giant OLX Expands in Brazil

Huge Growth Expected in Leading Latin American Online Market

SAO PAULO, BRAZIL – (February 4, 2010) – OLX, already present online in 90 countries, has announced the opening of a new office in Brazil. OLX.com.br has grown by 450% in the last two years and already counts 14 million visits per month in Brazil, with more than 1 million published items. The online classifieds company expects continued strong growth, aiming for 20 millions visits per month in 2010.

“The new office complements OLX’s presence in Latin America and allows us to be closer to our local clients, create marketing action plans and provide better technical support and stronger client relationships,” says Rodrigo Ribeirão, head of operations of the new Brazilian unit. Through those efforts, OLX anticipates attracting an even bigger Brazilian customer base, advertising and buying and selling online.

OLX offers seven categories of ads: real estate; autos, motorcycles and boats; community; classes; jobs; meeting people and services. The market for autos, real estate and jobs has the highest demand, representing more than 1 million ads published in Brazil and around 40 million around the world.

OLX sees Brazil as a very promising market since the country already has 67 million internet users and 14 million of them visit the OLX.com.br site every month. “We see Brazil as one of the most attractive online markets in the world. With the largest and most mature online market in Latin America, our goal in having a local presence is to better understand the Brazilian internet user and adapt our products to the needs and preferences of the local buyer and seller. Furthermore, with the opening of the Brazilian office, we expect our local activities to grow by 175% in the next two years, reaching 3.5 million active ads on the site,” explains Alec Oxenford, founder and CEO of OLX.

About OLX

OLX is the next generation of free online classifieds. OLX is used in over 90 countries in 40 languages. The company was co-founded in March 2006 by Internet entrepreneurs Fabrice Grinda and Alec Oxenford. OLX is privately held. The company is based in New York, NY and Buenos Aires, Argentina and operates two leading online classifieds networks hosted at www.olx.com and www.mundoanuncio.com. For more information, visit: www.olx.com.br

CONTACT:

Fabrice Grinda
Co-CEO
OLX, Inc.
#(917) 371.5441
fabrice@olx.com

 Global Classifieds Giant OLX Expands in Brazil