Tag Archives: Chris

Stop shouting at your social media fans

I know you. You’re spending all of your social media marketing budget on promoting your brand, products, and services; that’s fine except you’ve either forgotten — or never knew — that social media is a two-way street. It is.

20120531 crmbpiya7x7bam93ci7un1p72s Stop shouting at your social media fansAnd, something you also didn’t know: social media is two-thirds defense and monitoring — listening — and only one-third promotion and publicity — speaking. Most marketing folks not only don’t get PR but they revile it; sadly, this is what social media is, no matter what you call it: public relations, all aspects of it: publicity, of course, but also crisis management!

A social media crisis almost always begins as a customer support call and generally escalates slowly and then exponentially, generally because a customer doesn’t feel heard, doesn’t feel responded to, doesn’t feel appreciate, or doesn’t feel respected. And the truth generally has nothing to do with any of those things (at first) though both sides can easily become very heated.

The truth most often has more to do with “not hearing the knock at the door,” “not hearing the phone ring,” — not noticing they’re there. And that Mr. Nobody, that real nowhere man, need not be a sniping, paranoid, lonely, nebbish, either. That person may very well be Chris-Frigging-Brogen himself!

Yesterday morning, Chris Brogan reported his terrible experience with NMTW Community Credit Union. Though now resolved, let me summarize: Chris lost track of an account at NMTW, one of his many bank accounts, which had drained and been empty or negative for only a couple weeks. NMTW automatically closes account after 15 days. Chris was a 20-year veteran of this bank and reached out via the info@ email and then took to Facebook.

You lost a 20-year member today. I emailed your info@ email address to forward the reason why to your president. Wishing you better in the future.

Long and short of it, he received a form mail:

NMTW takes pride in its member service and we strive to add value to everyone’s day. We regret that in your situation we were unable to assist you any further at the time of your branch visit. NMTW would like to thank you for bringing this to our attention and in doing so will prevent similar events in the future.

At first, Chris sent an email to the company using the only email he could find; then he reached out, gently, using the only other point of contact he had with his favorite community credit union, NMTW, because it mattered to him. Finally, a response! But not a response to his terse Facebook wall post, a copy-and-paste form response (rule one, never copy-and-paste responses, ever).

I didn’t ask Chris but I bet you he was pretty bemused by everything up to this point, though indignation has probably been building. What got him was the fact that the Facebook response was out of sync with what Chris wrote on Facebook — was completely deaf to his comment — but that he was shut down. That his comment reached a dead end.

What Chris expected — demanded — (and what I demand as well) is that Chris’ and my ping via email, form, Facebook, or Twitter actually goes somewhere. And, in this case, Chris was completely explicit as to where, “forward the reason why to your president.” He expected, rightly, that there was a direct path — a stovepipe — that runs from the social media dashboard that NMTW uses in their Social Media Command Center directly all the way up to El Presidente. Rightfully so.

Everyone who consumes social media expects that. We have been trained to. We don’t expect that when we call an 800 customer support line, but we do expect satisfaction when there — or can be — witnesses. On a phone, tarring-and-feathering and stocks in the village square aren’t even worth it, but on Facebook and Twitter, there’s nothing to lose. Every altercation can be a bona fide “I’m as mad as hell, and I’m not going to take this anymore!” moment!

So, if you’re going to dance with devil — with social media, naked and covered with tar and feather in stocks at the very center of the village square, you had better spend at least two-thirds of your time, resources, and respect making sure you’re not missing very important conversations — listening — while you’re spending way too much of your time pitching, selling, marketing, promoting, hawking — speaking — like some itinerant peddler.

You’re better than that. Right?

Continue reading

Stop shouting and start listening to your social media fans

I know you. You’re spending all of your social media marketing budget on promoting your brand, products, and services; that’s fine except you’ve either forgotten — or never knew — that social media is a two-way street. It is.

20120531 crmbpiya7x7bam93ci7un1p72s Stop shouting and start listening to your social media fansAnd, something you also didn’t know: social media is two-thirds defense and monitoring — listening — and only one-third promotion and publicity — speaking. Most marketing folks not only don’t get PR but they revile it; sadly, this is what social media is, no matter what you call it: public relations, all aspects of it: publicity, of course, but also crisis management!

A social media crisis almost always begins as a customer support call and generally escalates slowly and then exponentially, generally because a customer doesn’t feel heard, doesn’t feel responded to, doesn’t feel appreciate, or doesn’t feel respected. And the truth generally has nothing to do with any of those things (at first) though both sides can easily become very heated.

The truth most often has more to do with “not hearing the knock at the door,” “not hearing the phone ring,” — not noticing they’re there. And that Mr. Nobody, that real nowhere man, need not be a sniping, paranoid, lonely, nebbish, either. That person may very well be Chris-Frigging-Brogen himself!

Yesterday morning, Chris Brogan reported his terrible experience with NMTW Community Credit Union. Though now resolved, let me summarize: Chris lost track of an account at NMTW, one of his many bank accounts, which had drained and been empty or negative for only a couple weeks. NMTW automatically closes account after 15 days. Chris was a 20-year veteran of this bank and reached out via the info@ email and then took to Facebook.

You lost a 20-year member today. I emailed your info@ email address to forward the reason why to your president. Wishing you better in the future.

Long and short of it, he received a form mail:

NMTW takes pride in its member service and we strive to add value to everyone’s day. We regret that in your situation we were unable to assist you any further at the time of your branch visit. NMTW would like to thank you for bringing this to our attention and in doing so will prevent similar events in the future.

At first, Chris sent an email to the company using the only email he could find; then he reached out, gently, using the only other point of contact he had with his favorite community credit union, NMTW, because it mattered to him. Finally, a response! But not a response to his terse Facebook wall post, a copy-and-paste form response (rule one, never copy-and-paste responses, ever).

I didn’t ask Chris but I bet you he was pretty bemused by everything up to this point, though indignation has probably been building. What got him was the fact that the Facebook response was out of sync with what Chris wrote on Facebook — was completely deaf to his comment — but that he was shut down. That his comment reached a dead end.

What Chris expected — demanded — (and what I demand as well) is that Chris’ and my ping via email, form, Facebook, or Twitter actually goes somewhere. And, in this case, Chris was completely explicit as to where, “forward the reason why to your president.” He expected, rightly, that there was a direct path — a stovepipe — that runs from the social media dashboard that NMTW uses in their Social Media Command Center directly all the way up to El Presidente. Rightfully so.

Everyone who consumes social media expects that. We have been trained to. We don’t expect that when we call an 800 customer support line, but we do expect satisfaction when there — or can be — witnesses. On a phone, tarring-and-feathering and stocks in the village square aren’t even worth it, but on Facebook and Twitter, there’s nothing to lose. Every altercation can be a bona fide “I’m as mad as hell, and I’m not going to take this anymore!” moment!

So, if you’re going to dance with devil — with social media, naked and covered with tar and feather in stocks at the very center of the village square, you had better spend at least two-thirds of your time, resources, and respect making sure you’re not missing very important conversations — listening — while you’re spending way too much of your time pitching, selling, marketing, promoting, hawking — speaking — like some itinerant peddler.

You’re better than that. Right?

Continue reading

Christmas came early for the Abraham Harrison team

I just wanted to wish you and yours Happy Holidays from the Abraham Harrison team and spread a little cheer of our own!

Chris 5231 Sm 150x150 Christmas came early for the Abraham Harrison teamWe are thrilled to announce that our very own AH President, Chris Abraham, has been named one of MarketWire‘s Top 10 Social Media Influencers of 2011. Chris was honored along with other major influencers (and great friends of ours) like Guy Kawasaki, Scott Monty, and Chris Brogan for his contributions to social media over the past year. Needless to say, we are very proud of him!

Please check out the announcement and maybe even send some congrats Chris’s way – as his best friend for the past 20 years, I know he’d consider that the best Christmas present he could receive:

 

2012 is looking to be a big year for us. We are launching our new website in January and we’re celebrating our five-year anniversary. Time has really flown by! Thank you for your continued support through the years, it means the world to us.

Happy Holidays!

Continue reading

Spotlight on Abraham Harrison Team Member Nina Martin

Ms. Nina Martin is the perfect example of a go-getter who landed her dream job right out of college. She’s evidence that hard work and long hours can put ya right where you need to be, which luckily in her case, is working on business development at Abraham Harrison.

nina 242x300 Spotlight on Abraham Harrison Team Member Nina MartinIt’s a heart warming story. She was interning at New Media Strategies in D.C., her junior year of college. Nina is actually a Baylor alum but had taken a semester off to work 4 days a week at NMS, taking night and Friday classes at George Washington University. Whew! A smart cookie of a professor brought in the infamous Chris Abraham who sparked Nina’s interest right away. An email was sent Chris’ way, an interview occurred and bam! Abraham Harrison acquired Nina as an intern as soon as she had settled back in Texas for winter semester.

Fast forward one internship, another year spent as an OA and helping with business development and unfortunately we lost one of our own to his dream job. Nina volunteered to take over business development until a replacement could be found, but there was no need. Nina started working full time for Abraham Harrison as soon as she graduated in June 2011.

It’s not all business in business development and I was able to unearth a few giggle related stories in Nina’s case. As many of you may know Chris frequently takes cross country BD road trips. Nina wasn’t about to pass up the chance to meet him and so a road trip to Fort Worth ensued. Joe T Garcias served as the backdrop for Everclear margaritas and yummy Mexican food. Side note- Nina happens to be a bad ass on the soccer pitch and so unfortunately, was on crutches for this meal. The meal went well, Chris behaved himself, the margaritas and crutches even got along just fine. It was only once Nina was half way home that disaster ensued. A flat tire to be exact, right in the middle of no man’s land.

Now Nina, and I quote, was not about “to call Chris to come save me at that point because he was still this intimidating big bad boss figure, so I ended up pulling into a gas station in the middle of no where and crutching to the back of my car. I was able to jack my car up and drop the spare tire but there was no way I was going to be able to lift the new tire up and secure it while I was on crutches.  All the sudden behind me I hear, “Hey little lady, looks like you could use a hand.”  Standing there is a guy that looks like he just walked out of an old western – giant belt buckle, big stetson hat, white handle bar mustache, huge Ford truck with a trailer full of horses.  He proceeded to finish putting on my spare tire in about 10 minutes, even though I’d been laboring for probably an hour. I bought him a 24 pack of Budlight and we went our separate ways.  It was one of those “only in Texas” moments.”

Those moments are far and few in between, most working days are slightly more tame. Wake-up call is on the early side and Nina’s favorite part of working from home is that she gets to take advantage of the most aromatic office around. Excuse me? You say. Nina is what I like to call a crockpot connoisseur. Ingredients for dinner go in, the work day begins, and by the time dinner goes around, the day feels entirely productive.

Nina’s main objectives for Abraham Harrison are varied.

“I send lots of emails scheduling things for Chris, Mark, and BD efforts. I’ll check my emails, then do a lot of proposal writing.  I also am constantly working in my down time to put together collateral that we can give to potential clients.  Whether it is new case studies, or white papers on our services, etc. We have so much material that we can use, I just try to get in formats that are appealing and easy to give out. I spend several hours every day on calls. Either in-house calls with team members or external calls with potential clients. My days are split pretty evenly between keeping all of Chris’s plates in the air and keeping the Business Development pipeline full. There is no set routine, always something different.”

Nina’s thoughts about the future of social media are that it will constantly evolve and that this evolution will be constantly exciting.

“If you look at just the past 5 years it is really mind blowing how quickly things come on to the scene, integrate themselves into our daily routine, and then are replaced.  Five years ago I checked my Myspace every day.  Over the weekend a friend Googled my name and my Myspace profile came up.  I was shocked because I didn’t even know I still had a page, and my last login had been three and a half years ago.  So I don’t spend much time wondering where social media is going, it is always going to be going somewhere. I’m satisfied at the moment with just embracing the new technologies that come my way and letting someone else figure out what the next big thing is.”

Amen, sister. And with that said, we know that we’ve got business development in the right hands. Just…don’t ask her to change a tire on crutches.

Continue reading

Spotlight on Abraham Harrison team member- Arsh Sarkar

seo1 300x208 Spotlight on Abraham Harrison team member  Arsh SarkarArsh is from Kolkata, West Bengal — in the eastern part of India. He’s 28 and completed a B. Tech in Information Technology. The work road began with a local software development firm but he left to work on his own. This was followed by time spent as a php freelance developer. Arsh realized a keen interest in SEO, which led him to Abraham Harrison. Even though the job wasn’t typical search engine optimization at first, he’s learned a lot about it at AH.

Arsh appreciates the “me” time that Abraham Harrison offers as a major bonus. There’s no fixed schedule of work hours so he can spend lots of time on personal interests. These interests include cooking, reading and exercising movie expertise. A self-proclaimed “movie buff,” he’s also a long-time fan of “The Simpsons.” Arsh used to collect stamps until he realized that emails just don’t deem them a necessity.

As seems to be a common feeling here at Abraham Harrison, Arsh is continually impressed by the evolution of communication channels. Ten different time zones? Not a problem. Daniel, Sara, Chris– they’re always available in some format. It’s only further evidence that the future of marketing holds in social media.

“I  am quite sure it will grow even bigger and better. When something new starts on the Web, the success of it totally depends on if people can use it/integrate it in daily life. With social media the online marketing is getting bigger every passing day. Even those B2B and B2C are using social media to spread the word and there is no doubt that it’s a part of everyone’s daily life now.”

Arsh also has a good feeling about mobile marketing. Recent studies have shown trends of using mobile phones to find information increasing at an accelerated rate. This is an area of communication science that still needs a lot of exploration. Reaching out to consumers and readers about products can be tough. With so much information around these days, it’s important to plot it and seed it carefully. Enter search engine optimization. The more accurate results search engines will show, the more confidence consumers have in the internet in general.

What does the future hold? Arsh wants to make substantial contributions to the vertical search engine. He’s been working at it the past two years. Off the clock, Arsh has managed to cross five things off his bucket list but we’ve still got 95 to go. My favorite to-do? Arsh would love to meet everyone from AH in person. Guess we’ve got quite the destination get-together to plan…

Related articles

 Spotlight on Abraham Harrison team member  Arsh Sarkar

Blogger outreach done well

blogger outreach 300x199 Blogger outreach done wellBlogger outreach is still a relatively new concept for many marketing and public relations agencies. Some are for, some are against, and some- like Abraham Harrison- believe it needs to be done correctly in order for it to work. Actually, President Chris Abraham is famous this week as Global Neighborhoods profiles Abraham for doing it right.

Chris Abraham is one of a large handful of PR professionals, who in my view, gets it about social media and PR. Yesterday , he had a decent post on tips for PR operatives trying “blogger outreach.”

What he wrote, makes sense and is good advice for swimmers in the ocean of clueless smilers and dialers who seem to plague those of us who write about topics of interest.”

-Shel Israel

Rule number 1. And 2 and 3 and 4. READ and RESEARCH editors that you pitch. My blogging gig is part time for Abraham Harrison and I still receive ten-plus pitches a day from companies who refer to me as “Abraham,” “Abraham and Harrison” “Abraham and Harisson MISPELLED,” “Jonathan,” “Sir (I am a Madame for future reference…or Princess Jenna preferably),” and many, many other general greetings which make no sense whatsoever.

That’s an immediate turn-off but if I deign to continue reading the pitches I’m often astounded as to what people are sending my way. Given my age and interests, yes personally I may read about whatever music star you’re launching in LA or who’s the next it-kid in the art scene, but Marketing Conversation readers probably won’t. And that’s who I cater to. I want to let them know what Abraham Harrison is up to, what Mark Zuckerberg is up to (that’s a full time job), what the technology world is up to.

Convince and Convert wrote a really cool article recently about what separates bloggers from reporters. Here are some highlights-

  1. As previously stated, we are generally not full time. Our time is valuable and if your pitch is not eye-catching, I’m sorry to say, I generally don’t read it.
  2. We don’t want to regurgitate your news release.
  3. We will scratch your back if you scratch ours. If your event is in three months, talk to us now, not a week before. Build a relationship with us and we’ll return favors a lot easier.
  4. We want to assume you actually read our blogs. Leave comments. Not just “nice post,” something of value.

Isn’t the whole goal of blogging and online writing in general to create conversations?

Related articles

 Blogger outreach done well

Savory Crepe Recipe

pans thumb Savory Crepe RecipeSavory Crepe Ingredients

Savory Crepe Recipe

In a blender or food processor, blend the eggs, milk, water, flour, salt, and the 2 tablespoons melted butter for 5 seconds, or until smooth. Stir down and repeat if necessary.

Or, to mix by hand, sift the flour into a medium bowl and add the salt. Whisk the eggs until blended, mix in the milk and water, and whisk this mixture into the flour and salt; stir in the 2 tablespoons melted butter.

Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour (though 2 hours is preferable) or up to 24 hours.

Gently stir the batter if it has separated. Heat a seasoned 6- or 7-inch nonstick crêpe pan over medium-high heat until hot. (Use a 9- or 10-inch pan for larger crêpes.)

It takes just 2 or 3 teaspoons of butter to coat the pan for a batch of crepes. A paper butter wrapper with a small amount of butter o­n it is a fast way to achieve this.

Coat the pan lightly with butter, lift the pan from the heat, and pour in 2 or 3 tablespoons of batter for a 6- or 7-inch pan, or about 1/4 cup for a 9- or 10-inch pan, tilting and rotating the pan to coat the surface. Cook until almost dry o­n top and lightly browned o­n the edges, about 1 minute.

Loosen the edges with a metal spatula and flip the crêpe over using your fingers or the spatula, then cook the other side for about 15 seconds, or until lightly browned.

Turn the crêpe out o­nto a clean tea towel to cool. Repeat with the remaining batter, wiping the pan with butter as needed and stacking the crêpes as they are cooked.

For serving immediately, cover the crêpes with aluminum foil and keep them warm in a preheated 200 degree F oven.

For serving later, wrap them in plastic wrap in quantities intended for each use and slip them in a self-sealing plastic bag. Refrigerate crêpes for up to 3 days, or freeze them for up to 2 months.

Keep a stack o­n hand in the freezer for unexpected guests. The crêpes will quickly defrost at room temperature, then separate with ease.

Via Chris Abraham & Sweet and Savory Recipes for the Home Cook

Continue reading

Now This is a Ford

170320092351.jpg.scaled.500 Now This is a Ford

I would love to sell my BMW and buy a Ford SUV if they made a new Bronco based on a short wheelbase Ford F-150. Man, that was one hell of a Ute. Come on Ford!

Posted via email from Chris Abraham

 Now This is a Ford