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Digital Marketing

Is ROI The Problem In Your Company’s Social Media Marketing?

by Brad Besancon

We Are Often Asked, “What Is The ROI of Social Media?” Here’s the Answer.

Sean Jackson, the CFO of Rainmaker Digital, offers on how companies should think about the ROI of all digital marketing.

Transcript

Robert Riggs: What has happened in the digital age though that businesses want to immediately jump to talk, talk, talk, sell, sell, sell, never listen, never even listen to what the customer might even want or the prospect might want and all – like ROI, what’s the ROI?

Sean Jackson: Right. So I think that’s being primarily driven – since you used the financial term, ROI, then that’s the problem because that means that a sales organization is being tasked with delivering results on a quarter by quarter basis and it is all about driving that immediate return rate and it’s a financial drive that is doing that. It is not a marketing drive that’s doing that.

Brad Besancon: Right, yeah.

Sean: And I think you see this most often with companies that have received a lot of funding or they’re under some sort of financial pressure and they’re saying –

Brad: A big boardroom.

Sean: Right. You got to go sell and you got to get out there and we need numbers. But it really is a trade-off between short term results and long term success. So I think when you look at long term success, people are saying we need to listen because we don’t care about the next quarter or the quarter after that. We care about the quarters that are happening four years from now, five years from now.

Brad: Yes.

Filed Under: Digital Marketing Tagged With: Brad Besancon, Business_Finance, CFO, Finance, Investment, Investment in social media, Kaan Pete Roi, Marketing performance measurement, Rainmaker Digital, Return on investment, Sean Jackson, Social Issues, social media

Tips On Listening In The Digital World From Sean Jackson at Rainmaker Digital

by Brad Besancon

Are You Tuned Into Your Digital Audience? Tips For Listening From Sean Jackson

Transcript

Sean Jackson: People don’t buy the product. They buy the idea that the product delivers.

 

Brad: That’s right.

 

Sean: And that is so important. So if you’re selling an idea, not a product but selling a true idea, then it really means that you have to stay tuned not only to those new people, but the people that have already bought off on the idea.

 

Brad: Yes.

 

Sean: Right? Because those are the people that are already invested in the idea. They want the idea to fulfill something in their life and the more that you can talk to those people, then they will not only help spread the word but they’re going to continue to repeat buy.

 

This is true no matter what market you deal with, B to B, B to C. Whatever acronym you want to come up with, that rule holds true no matter what.

 

Brad: People still buy from people.

 

Sean: They buy from people and they buy from people who care about them.

 

Brad: Yeah.

 

Robert: OK. So if you’re facing the challenges of “listen,” you’ve got a podcast Digital Entrepreneur.

 

Sean: Yes.

 

Robert: That you host weekly and we hear this discussed there and we hear also their marketers talking about the pressures of ROI and all. You give out great advice for how to handle that. So I encourage everybody to seize this.

 

Sean: Please!

 

Robert: Please, listen to my podcast.

 

Sean: Rainmaker.fm. It’s the Digital Entrepreneur.

 

Brad: Well, we’ve been talking about making a connection. We give ourselves –

 

Sean: That’s right.

 

Brad: We give ourselves

 

Sean: But I often think that that is the way that we can always grow is by learning more, right?

 

Robert: Right.

 

Sean: And understanding information and hearing from others that have been there, done that and now with the beauty of technology, we can share it via video, via audio, via whatever.

 

Brad: Yeah. It’s solutions, right?

 

Sean: Right.

 

Brad: You’re trying to fix a solution or sell a solution or connect with a solution or whatever it is. So –

 

Robert: Top three tips on listening, what do you do?

 

Sean: I think actively listen means that you’re not just nodding your head. You’re actively trying to understand what they said and that means that you’re putting a lot of your preconceived notions behind and not trying to fill up your head with, “What is going to be my response to what they just said?” It is, “I’m going to listen, taking a pause.”

 

The second key to listening is to also be thinking through the why. Go through the next level of whatever they say. Bring it out to them but never use the word “why”. “Why” is an accusatory term. What is it? How is it? Those are the ways that you can really get people to draw out.

 

The third way of actively listening – and it’s funny. It’s called “parrot back what they just said”. If you parrot back the last three words someone says, then they will expound even further.

 

Robert: Yeah.

 

Sean: And if you use a question at the end of those last three words, then of course they will repeat it and then expound upon it further. So I think when you look at active listening, combined with really what is the next layer of questions, combined with asking what they just said back to them, you will find they will give you much more and the irony being, they may actually convince themselves that you are so empathetic to what they have, what their needs are, that they want to only work with you.

 

[End of transcript]

 

Filed Under: Digital Marketing Tagged With: Brad Besancon, Clarity Digital, digital audience, Digital Entrepreneur, Digital World, podcast Digital Entrepreneur, Rainmaker Digital, ROI, Sean Jackson, Tips on Listening

If You Will Let People Talk They Will Tell You What They Want

by Brad Besancon

Sean Jackson, CFO and Partner of Rainmaker Digital Says Don’t Interrupt Your Customers Online Conversations

Transcript

Robert: I’m Robert. We got Brad here, with Sean Jackson, the CFO of Rainmaker Digital and we’ve known each other way back to Pubcon and you were the President of the Dallas Ad League. You’ve done it all from old – what we like about you, you are old media.

 

Brad: Old school marketing.

 

Robert: Old school marketing and now digital.

 

Sean: There you go.

 

Robert: So Brad is going to tell you about one of the challenges we run into in a process we use called “Listen, think, speak,” and we’re going to talk to you about “Listen”.

 

Sean: OK.

 

Brad: Yeah. So one of the things we find, Sean, is that companies don’t take the time to listen. They just want to sell, sell, sell or promote, promote, promote and they don’t take the time to really listen first to say, “What is it about my audience or customers or prospects that I need to take and then develop a plan or marketing plan off this?”

 

Give us a little idea about how you’ve seen that in the digital world, how you see things work, how you see things that haven’t worked. Just give us some of your insights.

 

Sean: I’m sorry. I wasn’t listening. Oh, wait a minute! No. I think that is the toughest part. I think in a sales-driven culture especially, everyone is so excited to get out there selling, right?

 

Brad: It’s all about the money.

 

Sean: Yeah, that’s right. I need to sell you and even if somebody says, “Wait, wait, wait. I’m ready to buy,” it’s like, well, I haven’t sold you enough yet, right?

 

Brad: There’s more. I need to talk more.

 

Sean: And I think it’s because typically in sales organizations, you have dynamic people wanting to speak, et cetera. But I think we’ve always found over history, between all media, that when we take time to listen, the most successful sales technique is listening.

 

I think the digital age has actually made it easier for us to listen than it has been in the past. So with all that said, if you’re not prepared to really take the time and understand that if you let people talk, they will tell you exactly what they want.

 

Brad: Exactly what they want. Yes. So you spoke the digital age makes it easier to listen. Tell us how you’ve seen that in real life. What is it in the digital world that makes it easier to listen? I’m not talking about software. Let’s get to a better level.

 

Sean: Sure.

 

Brad: We all have little buttons we can push. Let’s talk on a deeper level. What are some of the things you’ve seen that help you listen better?

 

Sean: Well, I think when it comes to businesses, certainly a lot of people now are feeling comfortable asking questions on the internet. So let’s go through the very basics. Google, right? Google Trends will tell you what type of topics seem to be trending or not, right? That’s a very informal way of seeing where a topic is and how it is –

 

Brad: Speaking of Google.

 

Sean: You know, basically how in Google Trends you can see how people are talking in an indirect way. But then even more intimate is all of our social media channels, right? When you’re looking on LinkedIn, you’re looking on Quora, you’re looking on Facebook, people are posting things out there and asking questions or they’re responding to questions that come up.

 

So I think from an observation standpoint, there are many, many ways out there. One of my favorite tools for listening is actually Quora because Quora, people are asking questions and people are giving responses.

 

Brad: Yeah.

 

Sean: So I think we have a way to be a little bit more sophisticated in how we hear people at a broad level. But then of course at a business level, there are different techniques that are needed.

 

[End of transcript]

Filed Under: Digital Marketing Tagged With: Brad Besancon, CFO, CFO and Partner, Chief financial officer, Clarity Digital, Dallas Ad League, Economy, Facebook, favorite tools, google+, LinkedIn, Online Conversations, President, QUORA, Rainmaker, Rainmaker Digital, Sean Jackson, Search Engines, Social Media & Networking, social media channels

There’s A Screen Between You And Your Customers. Is Your Brand Present?

by Brad Besancon

Mobile First: The Screen Between Your Audience and Your Brand

Transcript

VideoTranscript

 

Brad: Well, hello everyone. It’s Brad and Robert with Clarity Clip again and we are sitting in NorthPark Center Mall here in Dallas, Texas and we’re – it actually is Valentine’s Day and we’re wandering around here doing some observations, some – listening to things, speak research. What are we seeing?

 

Robert: Well, we’re seeing couples on Valentine’s, a special moment, and they’re going, “Hey, honey. I love you,” and she’s sitting right over there.

 

Brad: Yeah, they’re texting.

 

Robert: Oh, I love you too.

 

Brad: It’s the screen between.

 

Robert: Smile, heart, heart, heart.

 

Brad: The screen between.

 

Robert: Yes.

Experiencing Life With The Screen Between

Brad: The screen between. And one of the things we’ve really noticed – I mean this isn’t new, right folks? This isn’t new. But really over the last couple of years, it has really gotten bad, if we can say bad. But what we call it now is we call it life being experienced with a screen between. We don’t just go to a kid’s event anymore. We don’t go to a football game anymore. We don’t come to the mall anymore without doing what? We’re on our phone.

 

Robert: Yes.

 

Brad: And we can’t just watch our child sing or dance. We have to video it. “What do they do with all the video?” I wonder. What do people do with all that video if they get done with it? This is so bad that I heard the social secretary for President George W. Bush talk about – it became an issue in the White House and these are big, high-end donors. They’re all aged. They’re baby boomers. They’re older and stuff and they started getting complaints at all the events for the donors and supporters that no one can see the president because everybody has got –

 

Brad: Everybody has got – everybody is doing this.

 

Robert: Yeah. So they literally – the Secret Service had a bucket as you would go in and they started collecting them. So the fact that that demographic –

 

Brad: It’s not millennials. It’s not just millennials.

 

Robert: It’s everywhere.

 

Brad: It’s everyone.

 

Robert: That’s what our clients do not understand.

Think Mobile First With Web Design

Brad: Yes. One of the things we’re also seeing, which we’ve been preaching, we’ve been talking about for years in our company is you better be thinking mobile first. With website design, you better be thinking mobile first. With photography, content.

 

How is your social media? You know, 60 something percent of our time online now is in social media. So how are you using this to better your brand and your connection? Because there’s no more, “Hey Robert, do you know somebody that does this?” and I just – yeah, call this guy and I just call him. It’s over.

 

Robert: So first off, if your team in your company and marketing, there’s – talking about a new website or they’re talking about what they do on Facebook, you have to first look, “Well, what does that look like on the mobile phone?”

Think Mobile First and Responsive Design

Brad: On the phone, on a 4.5, 5-inch screen, not a 27-inch desktop anymore.

 

Robert: You as the executive and business owner, you might be still looking at the desktop. But I got to tell you something. You’re not your customer. That’s not the way they experience the world. It’s not the way they’re going to experience your product or your service.

AudienceSpeak: Communicating Your Message & Brand Through The Screen

Brad: Yeah, it’s right back to audience speak. What is the people you’re trying to target doing? How are they interacting with your brand? How are they interacting with life? Which now we interact with life right here now.

 

Robert: Yeah.

 

Brad: We don’t just come to a mall anymore and hang out. We’ve got to show on Instagram. We got to check in. We got to do all this stuff. Mobile, mobile, mobile because we are living in a screen between lifestyle now. So you have to think, “How can I get in between my potential client or customer’s life with that screen between?”

 

So whatever they’re experiencing, how do I interject my brand into that screen between to really connect and converse and then ultimately convert, right? That’s what we’re here for. So that’s our Clarity Clip of the week. We will see you here in the next couple of weeks and guys, get out there and enjoy life. Put the screen between down.

 

Robert: Thank you.

 

[End of transcript]

 

Filed Under: Digital Marketing Tagged With: brand, cellular telephone, Dallas, executive, Facebook, George W. Bush, Human Interest, Instagram, mobile, Mobile phone, President, Secret Service, social media, Social Media & Networking, social secretary for President George W. Bush, time online, White House

Are You A Polymath Like Steve Jobs? Clarity Creativity Series Part 3

by Brad Besancon


Transcript

Are You a Polymath Like Steve Jobs? It’s a Key Attribute of a Creative Person] [03:41]

Dr. Rodney Hill: Steve Jobs was a polymath, Einstein was a polymath. It’s a person that likes lots of different things. Music, Art, Science, Athletics, it could be a whole range of things.

Robert Riggs: An inquisitive person?

Dr. Hill: Very – curiosity.

Brad Besancon: I think I might be a polymath.

Dr. Hill: Yes.

Brad: That makes me feel good.

Dr. Hill: Yes, yes. Polymaths essentially come up with all the ideas because they don’t just –

Brad: Because there is not one thing they’re trying to focus on, right? They can just take in a lot.

Dr. Hill: No one they have just blinders on.

Brad: Yes.

Robert: So I mean, Brad is going to through takeaways with you in a minute but so is it important that if I want to have any chance of getting the flow on these other things, that I really ought to start thinking, just become more inquisitive and questioning things.

Dr. Hill: Yes. You need to question things but if you’re sitting at the environment, you need to look at you in particular, what sets you off? Einstein did it for 15 minutes. He would be working on something and then he would just zone for 15 minutes and everybody thought, “Oh, the old fool,” they’re nodding off and then he would come back, and he would write down all of the things that he thought of during the flow.

Brad: Interesting.

Dr. Hill: So depending on each person, has to find what sets him off. You’ve got to figure out who the people are doing the inventing, what helps them get into flow, what keeps them creative.

Brad: I mean, I think those are the key takeaways, right? Creative environment, so if you’re an employer, please think through that for your employees, especially if you have a strategic online marketing plan or social is a very part of your business – which it should be – then you need to remember that, right? And when they come to you and say, “Man, I really like a couple of days at home,” this came from reports available, you could go see how they produce more and make more money for you. If you are an employee, you need to be sure to try to figure out what your flow is, whether that’s the walk in the park or kind of zoning out, or shoot, I guess for some people it’s a nap.

Dr. Hill: It is.

Brad: Take a nap and come back and get refreshed and something. Listen to music, whatever that is.

Dr. Hill: Sometimes, you can be in a super loud environment, generally without words, like a jazz band in New Orleans, and you don’t listen to anything they’re saying but what it does, it provides this huge sound barrier of an aloneness so you can come up with a zillion ideas.

Brad: So go to a concert. Have a drink.

Dr. Hill: Just flow out while you’re in the concert.

Brad: Right, really interesting.

Robert: Okay, are you feeling the flow? We are. Rodney Hill, Dr. Rodney Hill, futurist, Texas A&M. We really appreciate you talking to us.

Brad: We really appreciate your time.

Dr. Hill: Sure, sure.

Robert: I think for a lot of people are going to walk into their balls this week, so unusual [02:56].

Brad: With those Clarity guys.

Robert: Alright, that’s – go ahead.

Dr. Hill: But one of the things too, if somebody’s looking at, we’re going to have to add more space for building at the building, or they could have a whole series of employees that are working at home. You don’t have to build a new building, you don’t have to worry about parking lot traffic, a whole range of things.

Brad: There you have it, guys.

Dr. Hill: As a matter of fact, AT&T has 40% working at home.

Robert: Wow.

Dr. Hill: Yes.

Robert: Well, there it is, the Clarity clip of the week, part 3. ending on creativity.

Brad: And you can learn it.

Robert: Yes.

Brad: Have a good one, guys.

Filed Under: Digital Marketing

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