New Marketing Expertise and a Special Discount Price

If you’re anywhere near the New England area, I hope you’ll join me, David Meerman Scott, Chris Brogan, Don Peppers and a host of other new-media marketing practitioners for a two-day forum that’s jam-packed with advice from experts in the latest online disciplines. And here’s a bonus: you get to see the inside of the Gillette Stadium’s fabulous conference facilities overlooking the football field where the New England Patriots play!

The event is the New Marketing Summit, and if you sign up with code PAULVIP, you get a $200 discount off the $795 registration.  Beginning today, you can also use that code to shave $50 off the fee for the Monday evening exhibits reception: That means for a mere $45, you can spend two hours on Oct. 14  perusing the latest new-media marketing tools and enjoying some fine drinks and hors d’oeuvres. Compare to an evening out in Boston; you can barely park for that amount :-).

David, Chris and I have worked closely with the experts at CrossTech Media to craft a program that we think represents the best of new marketing practices. A few highlights:

 

 

There are dozens of speakers, many of them successful practitioners who will tell what’s working for them and how you can benefit from their experience.

I’ll be opening day two of the conference on Oct. 15, speaking on the topic of  Profiting from Engagement: Why Content is the New Currency of Marketing. This represents my latest research and thinking on the market changes that are being brought about by a new breed of empowered customers who use their blogs, Facebook groups, recommendation engines and social shopping sites to define the terms of marketing engagement. Customers now largely control the brand and image of the companies they do business with. Don’t you think you should know all you can about those dynamics?

Please click the button above or the image below to register. That’s the venue for the event. Look me up when you arrive!

 

Gillette Stadium conference facility

Gillette Stadium conference facility

Use Social Media to Create Thought Leadership

Social Media can make you a thought leader if you’re willing to put in the time and effort to share your expertise and connect with others. On Thursday, Sept. 25, I’ll be hosting a panel of four innovators who have successfully promoted their brands and themselves as opinion-leaders in their markets. They include speakers from the technology, business development and consumer markets. Register here and I hope to see you there!

Using Social Media to Catapult Your Company to Thought Leadership

Thought leaders capture a disproportionate share of their target markets. New ventures and companies introducing new products frequently struggle with the need to position themselves as thought leaders in emerging markets. In the old days, this meant begging media influencers to pay attention to often unknown firms. But times have changed. Today, businesses can take their messages directly to the Web using social media tools to achieve rapid awareness and legitimacy. The keys are to understand the options available to you, use them in the most effective manner and establish consistent metrics to measure success.

Featured speaker Paul Gillin offers guidance on choosing the best tools for the job and using free Web services to measure performance. Paul is the author of the critically acclaimed 2007 book The New Influencers and the forthcoming book Secrets of Social Media Marketing. Following his introduction, a panel of practitioners explains how they quickly gained traction in their markets by taking their message directly to customers and opinion leaders.

Participants:
Paul Gillin
, Gillin Communications
John McArthur, Walden Tech Partners
Prat Moghe, Tizor.com
Jeremy Selwyn, Tacquitos.net
David Vellante, Wikibon.org

The Future Will Be Twittered

From my weekly newsletter. Subscribe by filling in the box to the right.

The annual South by Southwest (SXSW) Conference in Austin, Texas is a showcase for geeks and their new toys, but the event held earlier this month broke new ground in another way. Anyone who runs corporate events or works in a time-dependent business should be fascinated — and maybe a little scared — by what transpired there.

The highlight was the keynote interview with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg by BusinessWeek’s Sarah Lacy. Evidently, a lot of people in the audience didn’t much care for Lacy’s rather interruptive questioning style or her cozy familiarity with the subject. They were also put off by her failure to involve the audience more directly in the line of questioning.

So they started Twitteringabout it. And as the interview went on, the comments passed between attendees took on a life of their own. By the 50-minute mark, the emboldened audience was actively heckling the moderator. Lacy was a bit flustered, but she finished the interview. When she walked out of the auditorium a short time later, bloggers armed with a video cameras were there to record her reaction to the audience’s behavior. Here’s a video of the entire interview, annotated with audience tweets.

Sarah Lacy is a professional, and she will be just fine. She posted a response on her BusinessWeek blog and noted that the incident was actually good for pre-sales of her forthcoming book. What struck me about this incident is how it portends change in the speed of customer feedback.

The Feedback Conundrum
Veteran conference organizers know that getting audience feedback is like pulling teeth. They’re lucky if 20% of the attendees at an event even fill out evaluation forms, and it can take months to tabulate those results. Events are intimidating to audience members; they don’t control the microphone and they can’t communicate with each other very well. Services like Twitter change that equation.

The reason events at SXSW unfolded as they did is because audience members were able to communicate with each other. That’s the scary part. No speaker likes to think of a scenario in which his or her performance is judged in real-time, although I can certainly think of times when I wished I could pull a speaker off the stage.

The potential upside of this trend, however, is enormous. Imagine if you could stage an event — whether a conference, media campaign, product demo or something else — and get real-time feedback from the people watching. Or what if you could tie promotions to timely responses: “Text this number now in order to receive a 20% discount.” The technology to enable this interaction is here right now. I’m sure I’m only scratching the surface of the possibilities. Twittervision, Tweet Scan to tap into these conversations or to initiate new conversations themselves. All it takes is familiarity and imagination. An excellent list of third-party Twitter applications is available at the Twitter Fan Wiki.

David Weinberger's presentation available as a podcast

That was fast! Dan Bricklin has already posted a podcast of David Weinberger’s April 24 presentation to the Mass. Technology Leadership Council. The first 30 minutes are a fascinating prepared presentation. The next 80 minutes are a discussion that could have gone on for hours.

Thanks to Alex Howard for tipping me off to the podcast’s availability.


Excited to be going to Nantucket Conference

I’m delighted to have the opportunity to speak at Nantucket Conference, a highly regarded – and very intimate – annual event for top technology executives in New England. I’ll be on an afternoon panel next Thursday, May 3, talking about how social media is changing the practice of marketing. Then I plan to hang out and just listen to the wisdom of some of the smartest tech entrepreneurs in the country.

This is a special conference because the size of the audience is limited and the population of lawyers, accountants and consultants is kept to a minimum. It’s basically an event for business owners, investors and technology wizards. It takes place this year during a mini-boom in venture capital investing. Good timing and always a great program.

BTW, I think they’re accepting applications to attend for a couple of more days. You have to request and invitation on the website.