Tag Archives: yahoo

Don’t blame Marissa Mayer if your photo business sucks

flickrPRO Dont blame Marissa Mayer if your photo business sucks

Shooters are a bunch of over-sensitive wusses. I shot stock from 1983-2003 (for The Stock Market which became Corbis and for Pacific Stock) and people were saying that stock was the death of professional photography, or digital was or the Internet was or Photoshop was. Stop being such little whiny babies — besides, most of the people who are complaining about Marissa’s statement aren’t REALLY pros and I have seen lots of their stuff and while they have DLSRs, they’re not very good, either. So, better to blame your images than blaming the CEO of Yahoo! and Flickr and now Tumblr.

OK, background.  This is all the brouhaha happening right now, real time, all over social media about this article written over at Petapixel, RIP “Professional Photographers” — you might want to go check that out and the above will make more sense.

My dad started shooting in the 70s when you could become rich as a professional photographer — or at the very least make a professional living. And you can now, too. You just have to treat photography like a full-time business. And you’ll hate that doctors and lawyers always have much better equipment than you do, too. When I did commercial, editorial, and stock photography, things were harder. My failings had to do with the fact that shooting slide film for Corbis meant that I would shoot and label 10,000 images, send them on to Corbis, and then over 9,000 of them would come back to me — they’d keep a thou if I was lucky.  And that 10k of slides were already edited down from who knows how many, dumped in the can (these were film days with slides).

I am no longer a shooter. I love photography and the prestige associated with having a contract with a big NYC agency; however, I loved being a geek more and I loved that my mad skills with computers, the internet, coding, and the web allowed me quite a bit more money and security than being a professional shooter did.

That said, the images paid my way around the world in 1996 as I traveled from DC to New Zealand; Australia; Bali, Indonesia; all up and down Thailand; and then to Paris, Utrecht, Amsterdam, Helsinki and all around Finland; Saint Petersburg, Russia, and then back home — all porting a Domke full of two bodies, a Nikon N90s and N90, a bunch of expensive 2.8 glass, and loads of batteries and Fuji 100 and Velvia slide flim — and also mailers. Lots and lots of mailers.

I haven’t even tried to embrace digital photography at the professional level, though I am tempted.  Then I remember how much work it takes to be a shooter. Only 1/3 is shooting and doing cool shit. Another third is editing and labeling and captioning and deleting and uploading and identifying and I guess doing Photoshop (see, back in the day, a slide was a slide, it was what it was), and then there’s the final third: business!

So, pro shooters (though all of your complaining and hating on Marissa are probably more along the lines of advanced amateurs, fan boys, and possibly even talentless technophiles.

If you’re not making a good living being a shooter right now, you probably never will because Marissa is right: the world is conspiring to make getting the perfect image easier and easier — and for free!

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Fire for effect when you can’t get a bead on your market

4187565894 1e319e7ce0 m Fire for effect when you cant get a bead on your marketI’ve run a social media marketing agencies since Autumn 2006. In that time, we’ve learned quite a lot. One of my biggest learnings is that you can’t always get a direct bead on your demographic target — and that’s OK.

We’ve worked for a broad spectrum in these five years, from health care and pharma to huge radio astronomy projects; from global non-profits to very specific public affairs campaigns. Social media marketing and blogger outreach and activation can be effective for everything, though it isn’t always clear how.  B2B seems to be the least confident that social can help them but I believe we have really sorted it out:

If you cannot target your dream customer directly, you can target everyone around him

I call this “fire for effect” which is a term taken from artillery for when you don’t quite know where your target is or your target’s well-guarded or sheltered.  So, what you do instead is you fire downrange, doing your best to either step your shells closer and closer to the true target or to just use the shock and awe of incoming high explosive shrapnel shells going off everywhere else, distracting and engaging powerfully but indirectly.  (In artillery, you generally try to have someone down range, a forward observer, who can help you drop your mortars closer and closer, called adjusting your indirect fire, which I will discuss further along.)

Let me bring this analogy back to social media marketing

In two instances, I have seen indirect social media marketing work wonders.  80% of what we at Abraham Harrison do is long-tail blogger outreach.  Instead of “sniping” at just the top-25 most influential bloggers in any one vertical, we dig deep and often come up with between 2,000-10,000 relevant blogs.  Most client projects make it easy for their general appeal; however, in a couple notable cases, firing for effect was the only thing we could really do: targeting health care providers for a client that sells health care devices and targeting astronomers for a global radio telescope project.

What we quickly realized is that not only were the doctors and scientists that my clients most desired generally not blogging, they were also very busy and quite invulnerable to the sort of blogger PR pitches we were wont but they were also unpredictable and often volatile.

Doctors were almost impossible to access directly and scientists tended to be impolite whenever they received a plea via email from someone they didn’t know — typical A-lister behavior.

What we needed to do was to brainstorm and expand our campaigns to include everyone around the doctors.  Since the campaign was a public affairs campaign on hospital acquired infection-prevention, we brainstormed on who else is in the space — targeting the “ground” immediately around the docs, expanding as far out as we had budget and time.

Who did we come up with?  Well, nurses, orderlies, caregivers, parents of elderly parents, partners of the elderly, people with immunosuppressive diseases, parents of sickly children, pregnant women, nursing students, medical students, public policy bloggers — the list was thousands of blogs and bloggers long. All the earth around the OR, an impenetrable fortress, was razed and we super-saturated the blogosphere, the twittersphere, and the Facebookesphere with discussion, mentions, messaging, excerpting, and commentary about the very real issue of healthcare associated infections in today’s hospitals and clinics: ventilator-associated pneumonia, surgical site infections, cross contamination, etc.

The same thing with the scientists who are associated with the radio telescope campaign. The scientists were there, they were just snippy, so instead of risking too much negative feedback, we instead isolated them and instead reached out to everyone around them: science nerds, space geeks, techies, amateur astronomers, sky watchers, backyard astronomers, and stargazers.

When it comes to blogger outreach and engagement, the goal is never to convert the blogger into a customer, I must remind you, but is always to message through the blogger onto his or her blog as a post, tweet, retweet, or wall post.  If the blogger is a gatekeeper, a blockade, to the blog and the blog’s readers (and to the spiders and bots, busily indexing links and content for Google, Bing, and Yahoo!), then you must abandon them and move on to the more accessible publications — generally the hobbyists, the amateurs, and the aspirants of the social media and blogosphere.

Amateur hobbyist bloggers are generally hungrier, more available, more grateful, and don’t have the hundreds of “date offers” that journalists, professionals, or A-listers generally have — they’re interested in making a name and are generally pretty amazed when a brand or an agency is sensitive and generous around to notice a blog that’s not solidly in the A-list and are generally really appreciative and open to building an authentic relationship.

Why do all of this? Why expend all this energy and munitions on indirect fire?

The obvious answer is to smoke them out.  Since we’re often able to start a wildfire of blog posts, tweets, likes, retweets, and Facebook shares, there’s really nowhere for these well-fortified A-listers, scientists, professionals, and surgeons to hide.

And since all of the messaging, all the wildfire, is no longer coming from up range, from our battery, then it is no longer associated with us or our clients.  Now, the wildfire is owned by the blogosphere instead of the client or my agency.

This means that the public affairs messaging, the content from our social media news releases, and the emailing back and forth between my crack team of online analysts and the hundreds of bloggers who take up the flag of our outreach, become detached from the final end-product: the rash of intense conversation, posting, tweeting, and retweeting that has all of a sudden lit up the social mediasphere like day actually comes from an impressive number of bloggers and readers from the space and not, at the end of the day, directly from us — so, it is much more likely that these unassailable influencers will end up, at the end of the day, be influenced anyway, without ever being pitched directly by us.

We have seen this happen time and time again, so much so that we have cliches for these things: priming the pump, setting the stage, tenderizing the steak, fertilizing the field — and, of course, carpet bombing (I like that last one the best, but my management team wants me to stop using military analogies, so please forgive me for all the above).

Because nobody believes me that this all works, I like to collect “thank you blogger” posts (from the clients who allow) wherein we “thank” the people who blog and tweet for us, through earned media (we don’t pay anyone — all of this isn’t payola-based) and the numbers speak for themselves: Thank You Habitat for Humanity World Habitat Day Bloggers, Thank You All Who Supported International Medical Corps!, Thank You Fresh Air Fund Bloggers, Thank You Snuggle Crème Bloggers, Thank You To All Of The Olympic Bloggers, Thank you Alzheimer’s Bloggers, Thank You Habitat For Humanity World Habitat Day 2010 Bloggers, Thank You HAI Watch Bloggers, Thank You MLK Memorial Bloggers, Thank You Motionbox Bloggers, Thank You To All US Winter Olympic Bloggers — so, the proof is in the pudding.

At the end of the day, the results outlive the campaign on organic search

When hundreds of blogs and tweets are published online — public, archived, and indexed — most of which link to your client’s social media news release, web site, issue page, or landing page — hundreds of posts from a diversity of blogs and sources, almost always focused on a very impassioned three-week span.  While I don’t condone link-farming or any black hat or even grey hat tactics, earned media mentions — where “earned media” means that you make the offer — the pitch — to the blogger and the blogger decides if and when he or she will post and how he or she will post.

Some bloggers post the our pitch email directly to their blog and that’s cool.  A majority mention that they received a pitch from us and our client as well as excerpting and blockquoting a sizable amount of our very own copy from our social media news release. A minority actually spend the time to go in and write up a brand new piece, researched and contextualized, and we love those, too.  We’re realistic: we’re reaching out to someone, asking for their help, not paying them anything at all except attention, and then expect them to do us a solid and actually post about our clients for free?  Well, we’re always darned grateful for just about any mention — even, believe it or not, the spiny ones.  It’s all good.

And, at the end of the day, as they say, any publicity is good publicity as long as they link our client’s name, product, services, and keywords as close to right as possible.

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The best defense of your online reputation is a strong offense

reputation The best defense of your online reputation is a strong offenseYou can’t ignore the power that search holds for your business. If you’re a serious business person whose business isn’t digital, you’re probably too busy making money to fool around on social media. Social media’s stupid, right? Just baby pictures, workout check-ins, adorable kittens and the self-indulgent ramblings of under-employed folks too far to either the left or the right to amount to much.

Just because you’re old-fashioned doesn’t mean what you’re doing isn’t working.

Big business has adopted many of the tools of the digital age, but it hasn’t gone native — because it doesn’t need to. Big money doesn’t need digital to do big business. It’s just cream — an additional channel for additional revenue.

There’s a lot of business being done and a lot of money being made using ’50s-era technology: phone calls, meetings, conference calls, lunches, dinners and hours at the club or the golf course. The Internet has not usurped the traditional, it has merely enriched it; however, there’s also no barrier to entry so this party isn’t exclusive but it’s super-saturated with powerful influencers and new media gods. So, please beware.

Yes, I know: you’re too busy for all of this rubbish. But the truth is, you cannot afford to let another day pass without sending in your social media and search insurance premium.

While I appreciate how valuable your time is, you’re playing a very dangerous game of Russian Roulette. The reason you’re so accomplished is because you are a shrewd judge of the landscape — and the landscape has changed and it includes not just what’s said by your communications team, your press releases, the New York Times, the Financial Times, or even MarketWatch.

Folks are already talking about you online — or soon will, gladly and badly.

The social media lunatics have taken over the Internet asylum, and unless your very own personal voice, face, story, narrative, history, resume, wins and losses are fed into the Googlesphere, you’re vulnerable to whatever anyone cares to say about you, no matter who. No doors, gates or private security will insulate you from attack, insult and slander.

A bulletproof vest won’t help if you’re not wearing pants

You need to develop your own online song of yourself on the Internet — in advance of any problems you might encounter

There is no armor available to protect you besides the active armor that is your own version of yourself online in the form of your biography, personal history and content, content and more content. You need to get in front of the storm that’s sure to come. You need to develop and populate your own personal Whitmanesque song of yourself onto the Internet, into search-optimized text, links, images and photos — and you need to do it well in advance of any problems you might potentially ever have, no matter how discrete and low-profile you might fancy yourself.

Back in the day, the Internet witch hunt was for politicians, then it became bankers, now it’s evolving toward anyone and everyone who’s thriving in free enterprise and pursuing the American dream, especially as it relates to what’s going on in Washington and the elections. There’s never been a worse time to take your ball and go home. So, it’s better to take some time, get together with your lawyer or business partner, and approve reams of text and start speaking for yourself, your life, your choices and your accomplishments instead of letting someone else speak for you (they’re never nearly as charming as you and your colleagues are, that’s for sure).

“But where?” you ask. Well, you first need to build out any sites you already have, including all your companies, foundations and boards. Next, you should become a blogger — or at least develop a process to produce blog content since Google adores blogs and seriously understands the architecture and framework of most blog platforms. Finally, you should start populating every social network service, social bookmarking site and social news site. Here’s an incomplete though comprehensive list for you to start on:

43 Things, Badoo, Bebo, Blog.com, Blogetry, Blogger, Blogster, CafeMom, Cyworld, delicious, deviantART, Diaspora, Digg , Diigo , douban, eToro, Facebook, Flickr, Flixster, folkd , Foursquare, Friendster, Google+, GovLoop, hi5, italki.com, iWiW, Jaiku, LinkedIn , LiveJournal, Meetup, mixi, Mubi, Myspace, Netlog, Newsvine , Ning, Open Diary, Orkut, Pinboard , Pinterest, Plaxo, Plurk, Posterous, Reddit , Squidoo , StumbleUpon, tribe.net, Tumblr, Twitter, TypePad, Virb, Vox, WordPress.com, Xanga, XING

Share more than you might want to

Do exactly the opposite of what you’d like: Reveal ’til it hurts.

You need to reveal yourself completely — as much as you, your spouse and lawyer agree to, anyway (forget your kids, they’ll be embarrassed, of course) — and you need to give ’til it hurts and well past your normal tendency toward discretion and your obsession with privacy. That Sea-Dweller on your wrist isn’t pretension, it’s because you’ve been a world class Submariner for yours — but you need to come up for air from now on, otherwise, you’re sure to be sunk.

Feel free to own the yacht but hire a crew if you’re not yet seaworthy. If you get my drift and want to adopt the yachting lifestyle yourself but either don’t have the mad sailing skills yourself, don’t yet posses a world-class crew, and don’t know yet where to go, then you should give me a call or reach out me by email — so I can help you pilot your vessel now, in the tranquil blue-green shallows of the Caribbean, as well as in the roughest seas and into — as well as out of — the storm.

Whichever way you go, please start. You can keep it simple and slow, but start today. You can task your Summer Intern (whatever times’ left), you can push it on your PR or communications team, or you can do it yourself — but do it.

It’s essential that you start feeding your best self online before you’re brought down by just about anyone with a device and a connection to the Internet — and you won’t be able to sue your way out of this one, I promise you.

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Take your time to do reputation defense the right way

Online reputation is a marathon and not a sprint.

courtlyLove1 Take your time to do reputation defense the right wayOne thing I have learned over time is that you cannot treat your online reputation like a barn-raising — you can’t construct an entire online reputation in a long weekend by just getting “all hands on deck,” throwing money, availability, strong shoulders, and resources at it all at once.

Rather, it’s more like building a wooden boat from scratch: You can spend a weekend designing it, sourcing your materials, and collecting all your tools, but some things take time; and, in boat-building, some things take longer than others (stains and waterproofing take time to dry, bending and curving and shaping wood also requires wetting and careful molding).

Google wants a long-term relationship, not a one-night stand

If you decide to take control of your brand and think you can do it in a weekend, don’t. Google requires courtship and courtly behavior. While it is perfectly fine to have passion and excitement in your content creation as your write your way into the Web and into Google’s many index servers, it’s not OK to go for a home run on your first date. Take it slow, and make it known that your intentions are honorable and that you intend to commit for the long term. Google wants to start a family with you, with your children as the happy searchers. Build a strong foundation, yes, but then continue building, deepening, and growing your commitment, slowly but surely, for the rest of your life.

Oh, you might have your way with Google right out of the gates but it won’t turn out well. If you don’t keep calling, sending flowers, writing poetry, and maybe even marry into the Google family in the form of Google Analytics, Google AdWords, Google AdSense, and Google Apps for Business, you’ll end up not in the dog house — worse!

The best case is you’ll end up in Google’s quarantine: the Google Search Sandbox. The worse case is you’ll be banished! Purged from the Google Empire and out of the Google Index, needing to make all of your future search connections based only on searches made on Bing and Yahoo! Yes, that bad!

Yard crashing, sure; Google crashing, at your peril!

I’ve become fascinated with the DIY channel’s series of “Crashers” reality shows called Yard Crashers, Home Crashers, Bath Crashers, and Kitchen Crashers (Alison Victoria is very fetching indeed) — though there may well be more. The premise is simple: guileless do-it-yourselfers, shopping at their local DIY store, are approached by a handsome/gorgeous contractor who offers to follow them home and completely demolish and rebuild their yard, home, bath, or kitchen — all for free and for television. I am obsessed. And in three days, a dingy, dog-dirty desert of a yard becomes a Roman bath, complete with outdoor kitchen, a grand stainless hot tub, and a huge fire pit. In three days.

Don’t ever try to go all the way with Google. Never try a Google Crashers. Never. Ever.

Reputation defense beginning with defensive SEO

Back in the day, when I just started doing reputation defense back in 2004 or so (I called it Defensive Search Engine Optimization, or DSEO), it was really only me, so what I would do is burn a few 20-hour days (making up for the years my clients refused to participate online) collecting any and all assets (press releases, bios, news items, awards, links — anything and everything) and I would pretty much pull a DIY-inspired episode of “Rep Crasher” — dumping all of this SEO- and keyword optimized content into the search-o-sphere.

I quickly discovered that this is the equivalent of “going too far” with Google. And Google will very much throw a drink in your face; or, more likely, a slap or — even more likely — a restraining order.

Google is optimized for the real-time Web, something they call real-time search. As a result, Google needs to respond immediately to your barn-building content bonanza with quick wins in search — it has to. Why? Well, because Google aspires to real-time, immediate results — created now, served now.

Google won’t admit it but Google has a severe case of FOMO — a fear of missing out!

Google is obsessed with piping hot bread, fresh from the oven content because it aspires to real-time, immediate results

In short, Google is obsessed with piping hot bread, fresh from the oven — because that’s what people online want, circa 2012: Twitter serves the hottest bread in town, steamy and moist with a flaky crust; Facebook does a pretty good job; and Google+ is doing its best; the blogosphere performs pretty well still, but Google has had to trust, serve, and then verify. It needs to beat all the others when it comes to speed-of-inclusion. So, in spite of itself, it needs to be quite permissive. Uncomfortably so, for Google.

This puts Google in a very vulnerable situation. It means that Google will bend to your mad-advances, but only at first — for fear of missing something; for fear of losing a single customer to another real-time-web cafe. This sort of mandatory de facto trust and vulnerability pisses Google off to no end; and, if Google discovers its trust has been misplaced, hell hath no fury like a Google scorned.

Cool your jets and take your time, do it right

If you’re going to spend 20 hours a day for three days — no matter if you’ve a team of a dozen or just yourself — spend your 60 hours as follows:

  • 10 hours to collect all of your ideas and content — including textual, graphic, and photographic assets — into web-optimized and web-ready content — it might seem like a lot of time but I suggest that you dig deep. I suggest you reach back a decade if you can. The Internet doesn’t care so much when something happened so much as if it mentions you, is interesting, relevant, and searchable — is it textual, searchable, and online? Make it so!
  • 10 hours to set up as many social networking profiles as you consider germane and relevant to your reputation (do you really need MySpace, Orkut, or Friendster?). Be sure to spend all the time you need to to completely populate absolutely everything they ask for — even if it spooks you (social networks and search both reward you for oversharing publicly). Go ahead and populate them completely, social networks are not the same as online content such as web sites or blogs. Also, please shamelessly upload all your webmail address books and connect to as many friends and family as is humanly possible: The new Google cares as much about how many people you’re connected to and who they are as they do about your mad obsession with relevant content creation! Google does not reward lone wolves.
  • 5 hours to reserve as many domain names as you can afford, including all top-level domains (joe6pack.net, joe6pack.org, joe6pack.co), all variations of your name, without spaces as well as with hyphens (joe-6pack, josephsixpack, joseph6pack), any obvious misspellings that you’ve been plagued with (jo6pak, joe6pac, etc). This may end up costing a couple of hundred dollars — or more, if you need to acquire them from a squatter, a premium store, or from an auction. Spend the money.
Eschew all pronouns — Google doesn’t get them, nor does Google get context. Aim at being painfully literal.
  • 5 hours to set up a Posterous, WordPress.com, Typepad.com, and Tumblr account. Make them pretty, and then map a couple-few of your domains onto them — also, be sure to populate any and all “static” information you can — the who, what, when, where, why, and how if you — and be sure to link to your hobbies, interests, concerns, and professions as well as refer to yourself and to your brand in the 3rd person — channel your inner Bob Dole. Eschew all pronouns — Google doesn’t get them, nor does Google get context. Aim at being painfully literal at all moments — think about it this way: you’re Kirk trying to communicate with Spock.
  • 20 hours to slowly feed in your content, broken into 15-minute increments — 80 of them — that you can then use on a daily basis — yes, for 80 days! That means that all of this will have taken upwards of 90 days, right? Don’t rush. You know how they say that you cannot allow a starving and dehydrated person to eat and drink all they want or they could die? Well, after front loading a bunch of profiles and blogs with a framework of you, Google will have its eye on you! You’ll need to make up for your last mad Dionysian 30 hours of content creation with some more Puritanical daily bread. Take all of those assets you’ve collected — as well as things you’ve done or are doing — and pepper them into your new garden of content. Don’t over-water and don’t show preference to any one plant: in that modest 15-minutes, update your Twitter and do a blog post; then, the next day, update your Google+ business page and Tumbl something
  • 10 hours to weave your web of friendship, broken into hour-long, weekly batches, check for friends, follow people back, read what they’re writing and comment, +1, Like, and wish them happy birthday; another day, share something you’re doing. Follow people who are relevant; unfollow people who aren’t Growing and pruning your social networks is as important as anything else. Like I said before, some of the things that robots and auto-posters cannot do very well is make friends and influence people online; so be sure to let Google know you’re a human being! Shake your hand at Google and say, through your real connections, real follows, and real engagements that you’re not an elephant, that you’re not a monster. Come on, say it with me: “I am not an elephant! I am not an animal! I am a human being! I am a man!”

Online reputation is a marathon and not a sprint

As I said in the subject line of this post, with Google, you need to be willing to maybe spring right off the blocks but then you’ll need to settle into the long game. If you’re too passionate and assertive with Google, you’ll be rebuffed and sent into the sandbox or worse; if you’re catatonic, you’ll be rebuffed as well and sent into archive mode, which is almost as bad. And, after your 80-90 days are over, you’ll have to basically continue that forever and ever and ever, ad infinitum — or at least as long as you care about controlling and maintaining and owning your own search results online.

Frustrated, confused, overwhelmed? No worries! You can simply ask my company, Reputation.com (877-258-3166), for help — or me, of course, via email, Twitter, Facebook, Google+, Skype or telephone — and we’ll take care of it all!

Indeed, sometimes it’s just a lot nicer and easier to get help from someone who has done this hundreds and hundreds of times — especially if your time is more valuable than your money. On the other hand, if you have some vacay coming up and you hate reading at the beach, the above instructions should do pretty well by you, at least in the meanwhile and at least as long you’re not in crisis mode. If you’re in crisis mode, you’ll want to escalate it to the next level.

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