How People Share Content On The Web

The above image is by Chart of the Day (@chartoftheday) using research by 33across.com’s (@33Across) tynt (@tynt). See the news release. Also see eMarketer's (@eMarketer) article, "Copy and Paste Drives Sharing."

Social sharing buttons may be sexier, but according to research...copy and paste is the sharing method of choice 82% of the time.

...For users, copying and pasting to share content holds obvious appeal: It's almost frictionless, and it allows the sharer to choose exactly what to pass on to a friend or social network.

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you make your brand content strategically and easily share-able.

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The Religious Composition of the 113th Congress

The above Infographic and chart are by The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life (@pewforum). See the corresponding article, “Faith on the Hill: The Religious Composition of the 113th Congress.”

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Family Christian Stores Buys Itself, Pledges to Give 100% of Profits to Widows and Orphans

The management team of Family Christian (@FCstores), the nation's largest Christian retail chain with 280 stores in 36 states, has partnered with a group of Atlanta-based Christian businessmen to acquire the company from its private equity owners. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

Under the new ownership, Family Christian's pledge is to contribute 100% of its profits to Christian causes and, specifically, ministries serving widows and orphans both in the USA and abroad. Family Christian has always been committed to providing resources for the Christian community, but the new ownership structure will allow the organization to not only equip Christians in their daily walk, but to increase the organization's impact by providing substantial financial support to faith-based causes.

Read the news release.

Additionally, Family Christian president and CEO, Cliff Bartow, told Publishers Weekly the company has decided to drop its own e-reader – the edifi, launched in June – “because the technology is moving so rapidly, and this is not our core competency.” Instead, Family will work with Kobo (@kobo), carrying four of their color devices and three of their black-and-white devices for the Christmas season. “We definitely believe in the future of ebooks,” Bartow said. (Also see PW’s earlier article, “Family Christian Chain Launches E-Reader.”)

As for the future of brick and mortar, Bartow said, “We believe our stores are a viable concept. Today customers want to be served through multiple channels. Look at Apple--they do business online but their physical stores are also important. Our customers want the store experience. They want a place they can come for inspiration and interaction with our staff.”

Also see Christianity Today’s coverage.

Let Somersault (@smrsault) help you navigate the fast-changing environment of today's book publishing world.

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Insights into Fastest-Growing Population Segment in the USA

A new study, Hispanic America: Faith, Values & Priorities, reveals Hispanic-Americans’ attitudes about faith, family, and societal issues and gives insights into how their views will impact the political, social and economic climate in the US.

The study, conducted by Barna Group (@barnagroup) in partnership with American Bible Society (@americanbible), the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference (@nhclc), and OneHope (@FollowOneHope), finds that:

·         7 out of 10 Hispanic-Americans (69%) think public schools should teach the values found in the Bible

·         54% identify themselves first as Hispanic or Latino before American, Catholic or Christian

·         Hispanic-Americans are "very concerned" about school dropout rates (58%), immigration (53%), unemployment (57%), healthcare (54%) and housing (52%)

·         42% say the Bible influences their views of political and social issues; however, four out of 10 Hispanics (43%) read the Bible less than once a year

·         Hispanics believe the number one way they contribute to American society is through their commitment to family

·         78% say the traditional family is the main building block of a healthy community

·         When faced with a moral or ethical choice, approximately one-fourth (22%) of those surveyed make choices based on principles or standards they believe in say they should do; those standards were most commonly defined by their parents or the Bible

·         97% of those surveyed indicated they are proud of their Hispanic heritage

By 2050, it’s predicted there will be no ethnic or racial majority in the US and Hispanics are projected to make up 25% to 30% of the population. Thus, Barna Group says, the impact of beliefs and behaviors of Hispanic-Americans is becoming increasingly significant.

Coinciding with the release of the report, Barna Group announced the creation of its Hispanic division.

In related news, Christianity Today (@CTmagazine) magazine is preparing to launch its publication in Spanish, titled Cristianismo Hoy, with the March/April 2013 issue.

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you analyze research information and understand the changing marketplace.

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Live Streaming an Academic Conference

ZondervanAcademic / Koinonia Blog (@ZonderAcademic), along with 49 other publishers/exhibitors, is at the annual meeting of the Evangelical Theological Society this week in Milwaukee, WI. While there, it’s live streaming all plenary speakers, including Calvin Beisner, Russell Moore, Richard Bauckham, and Douglas Moo, and a panel discussion on Friday at 11:10 am EST.

And beginning this weekend in Chicago, IL, the annual gatherings are taking place of the Institute for Biblical Research, the Society of Biblical Literature (@SBLsite), and the American Academy of Religion (@AARWeb Somersault will be there.

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you publish and market your print and digital resources to the academic market.

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Improve Your Presentations in Real Time

Harvard Business Review Management Tip of the Day (@ManagementTip) offers helpful insight into the best practices of giving presentations:

Skilled speakers monitor the room. Look for audience cues such as interest or boredom. Note the questions people ask as they may point to areas that need clarification.... When possible, have a random spectator take notes on audience reaction. Once it's over, do a thorough post-mortem. Was your objective achieved? Did the audience seem engaged? Note what went well and what didn't. Ask for feedback from credible participants. If you're making the presentation again, how will you improve it next time? (Source: Harvard ManageMentor Online Module: Presentation Skills)

Heidi Grant Halvorson (@hghalvorson) identifies the presentation mistake you don't know you're making: "Presenter's Paradox."

We assume when we present someone with a list of our accomplishments (or with a bundle of services or products), that they will see what we're offering additively. If going to Harvard, a prestigious internship, and mad statistical skills are all a "10" on the scale of impressiveness, and two semesters of Spanish is a "2," then we reason that added together, this is a 10 + 10 + 10 + 2, or a "32" in impressiveness.... [But] people don't add up the impressiveness, they average it.

More is actually not better, if what you are adding is of lesser quality than the rest of your offerings. Highly favorable or positive things are diminished or diluted in the eye of the beholder when they are presented in the company of only moderately favorable or positive things.

Read this in full.

Lecturer Nilofer Merchant (@nilofer) writes about the lessons she learned when she gave her TED Talk and it didn’t go as well she expected:

·         The first step is to admit something is wrong.

·         The second step is to ask what specifically went wrong — and get help if you need it.

·         Then, listen.

·         Begin the process of undoing.

Read this in full.

HBR’s How to Practice for Your Presentation says, practicing your presentation is essential.

Make sure you build in extra time for it. Go through all your material each time you rehearse, including how you are going to stand and move, and how you will incorporate any visuals. To prevent technical gaffes, use the equipment you will have during the real presentation. Speak your lines out loud until they no longer sound memorized. While rehearsing, concentrate on your message and your desire to communicate it well, rather than on your notes. If you’re speaking to a large group or it’s a high-profile event, consider videotaping your practice session so you can evaluate and tweak it more closely.

Presentation expert Nancy Duarte (@nancyduarte & @Duarte) asks, “Presentation coming? Know these things about your audience”:

·         What are they like? Think through a day in the lives of your audience. Reference something that they face every day so they’ll know you “get” them.

·         Why are they here? What do they think they’re going to get out of your presentation? Are they willing participants or mandatory attendees? Highlight what’s in it for them.

·         What keeps them up at night? Everyone has fears or pain points. Let your audience know that you empathize—and that you’re here to help.

·         How can you solve their problems? How are you going to make their lives better? Point to benefits you know your audience cares about.

Read this in full.

Duarte also says, “To persuade a listener, establish common ground.”

It's one thing to give a smooth presentation. It's another to move the people in your audience to do something. To accomplish the latter, figure out what you have in common with the people in the room, and speak to the audience at that level. Think about the values, interests, shared experiences, or challenges that you share so you can reference them in your dialogue.

Read this in full.

And she asks, “Do your slides pass the glance test?”

People should be able to comprehend each slide in about 3 seconds.

Think of your slides as billboards. When people drive, they only briefly take their eyes off their main focus — the road — to process billboard information. Similarly, your audience should focus intently on what you're saying, looking only briefly at your slides when you display them.

She says slides should reflect attention to eye flow, contrast, white space, hierarchy, and unity.

Read this in full.

See our previous blogposts on the topic of presentations.

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you effectively communicate your brand message.

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Viral Video: Julia Child Remixed

The year 2012 would have been public television cooking instructor Julia Child’s 100th birthday. To celebrate, PBS Digital Studios (@PBSDS) commissioned John D. Boswell, aka melodysheep (@musicalscience), to produce the above video, auto-tuning Julia’s cuisine phrases through the years. The result is more than 1 million views. Do you have content you could repurpose to advance your brand?

Also see our previous blogpost, “The 3 Qualities That Make A YouTube Video Go Viral.”

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you produce a viral video.

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A Quick Guide to Modern-Day Link Building

Link building, also known as link baiting, is the viral marketing process of creating quality, interesting, and attention-getting content in a website with the intent of encouraging other websites to link to it, thereby contributing to a better search engine ranking for the original website.

In Search Engine Journal (@sejournal), Neil Patel (@neilpatel) co-founder of KISSmetrics.com (@KISSmetrics) offers “8 ways to create link bait content that will break through the clutter in today’s world and help you get the links you want”:

·         Infographics

·         Egobait

·         Interviews

·         Microsites

·         Drawings

·         Videos

·         Quizzes

·         Stories

Read this in full.

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you plan and execute effective social media marketing.

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The Millennial Consumer

A study by The Boston Consulting Group (@BCGPerspectives) says young consumers in the US are developing distinct attitudes and habits, providing brand owners with a chance to build long term loyalty. “The Millennial generation (16-34 year olds) is bigger than the Boomer generation (47-65 year olds) and growing in influence.”

Although the youngest members of the Millennial generation are still economically dependent on Mom and Dad, older Millennials are beginning to enter their peak spending years. While they are not yet set in their ways, they are forming preferences, exhibiting tendencies, and influencing one another’s opinions and behaviors. This generation engages with brands, channels, and service models in new ways limited only by the rate of technological advancement and innovation.

·         US Millennials are extremely comfortable with technology....They tend to own multiple devices such as smartphones, tablets, and gaming systems.

·         US Millennials are much more likely to multitask while online, constantly moving across platforms — mobile, social, PC, and gaming.

·         Both groups spend roughly the same amount of time online, but Millennials are more likely to use the Internet as a platform to broadcast their thoughts and experiences and to contribute user-generated content. They are far more engaged in activities such as rating products and services (60% versus 46% of non-Millennials) and uploading videos, images, and blog entries to the Web (60% versus 29%).

·         US Millennials spend less time reading printed books and watching TV. Only 26% watch TV for 20 hours or more per week (compared with 49% of non-Millennials), and when they do watch, they’re more likely to do so on their computers through services such as Hulu (42% versus 18%).

·         US Millennials are engaged in consuming and influencing; a generation that embraces business and government and believes that such institutions can bring about global change, one that is generally optimistic, and one that has often-unexpected attitudes and behaviors.

·         US Millennials are all about instant gratification. They put a premium on speed, ease, efficiency, and convenience in all their transactions.

·         For this generation, the definition of “expert” — a person with the credibility to recommend brands, products, and services — has shifted from someone with professional or academic credentials to potentially anyone with firsthand experience, ideally a peer or close friend.

·         US Millennials use technology to connect with a greater number of people, more frequently, and in real time.

·         This desire for connection and shared experience also extends offline. Millennials are much more likely than non-Millennials to engage in group activities — especially with people outside their immediate family.

Millennials believe that working for causes is an integral part of life, and they are drawn to big issues.

Read this in full.

Also see our previous blogposts, "US Consumer Habits Evolving," “Young ‘Millennials’ Losing Faith in Record Numbers,” and "Millennials Aren't Kids Anymore; Plurals Are."

Let Somersault (@smrsault) help you analyze consumer research to better understand your market.

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UPWORD 2012 Scripture for 11/09/12

UPWORD 2012 (http://SeeGodsWordinAction.com/UPWORD2012) (#UPWORD2012) is a campaign during the US presidential election season that reminds us God is in control. Get a Bible verse paired with stunning, original nature photographs delivered to your email inbox. Also get free downloads of the New Testament, screensavers and wallpaper, a blogger badge, a YouTube video of the verses, and a mobile app when you visit http://SeeGodsWordinAction.com/UPWORD2012. Tell your friends and share on your social sites. See the announcing news release.