The Social Habit 2012 Study

 

See the SlideShare deck page.

See the report in pdf.

According to a new survey, 56% of Americans have a personal profile on a social network, up 4% from 2011. And the number of people who say they follow brands or companies online has almost doubled in the last 2 years, to 33% of those polled.

These stats are from The Social Habit 2012 study by Edison Research (@edisonresearch) (SlideShare; Blog) and Arbitron (@ArbitronInc).

See The Social Habit website (@thesocialhabit).

WCG (@WCGWorld) highlights the following from the report:

·         Social networkers check their profiles often

·         Understanding the mobile experience is critical

·         Visual content is king

·         Users of social networking sites are following brands now more than ever

·         Facebook does impact buying decisions

·         It is not all about the coupon

Read this in full.

Also see our previous blogpost, “Report: Half of Americans Are Now Social Networkers.”

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you strategically leverage and effectively communicate your brand message using social media.

And be sure to bookmark and use daily the SomersaultNOW online dashboard.

Connected on Vacation

This week’s The New Yorker (@NewYorker) cover bitingly captures how obsessed Americans are with being online all the time, no matter what we’re doing and who we’re with!

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you capitalize on the digital revolution to strategically and effectively publish and market your brand’s content.

And be sure to bookmark and use daily the SomersaultNOW online dashboard.

Zola Books Aims to Replace Google Books, Then Take on Amazon

New York-based start-up Zola Books (@zolabooks) is planning to replace the Google eBooks re-seller progam (to end in January; originally embraced by the American Booksellers Association), as the ecommerce platform of choice for independent bookstores selling ebooks.

According to Digital Book World (@DigiBookWorld), “Zola will offer readers a social e-reader and bookstore, independent bookstores a new place to sell ebooks, and publishers another storefront to display their wares. When it launches to the public on September 19, the company plans to make a splash, offering readers a sizable selection of ebooks, including titles that will only be available on Zola.”

The plan is to offer a selling experience for independent bookstores that is easier, more attractive and more profitable than Google eBooks was.

Zola allows each independent bookstore to create its own storefront that it curates with titles it thinks its readers will like. Each bookseller is responsible for marketing their storefront but the proceeds could be worth it. Zola will pay independent bookstores 60% of net proceeds from every sale.

With Zola, publishers get a straight 70% of every sale and then Zola and its partners split the rest after paying a 4% credit card transaction fee....

In addition to providing a storefront for bookstores, Zola is providing pages for publishers, book reviewers and influential bloggers. Books sold through those pages will net whoever maintains the page an affiliate commission, which will vary in size depending on who or what the affiliate is. Each storefront comes with tools that allow for simple integration with all major social platforms so pages can be kept up-to-date by tweeting.

Read this in full.

Tech Crunch (@TechCrunch) reports, “The company’s Zola Social Reader will work on the Kindle Fire, Nook, and iPad. Zola Books will make both native apps as well as HTML5 apps available for its readers.”

Given the controversy surrounding ebook pricing right now, the company has decided to hold off from selling books until the publishers and the US Department of Justice have settled their current issues. Zola Books plans to use an agency model for selling books, meaning it will give authors and/or publishers full control over the pricing of content their are publishing exclusively on the site. By the time it launches publicly, the company expects to have every publisher on board. Exclusive content on the site will be offered DRM free.

Read this in full.

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you publish and market ebooks and pbooks, as well as stay current with the quickly changing digital publishing world.

And be sure to bookmark and use daily the SomersaultNOW online dashboard.

The Wizard Of Ads

Jim Gilmartin, president of Chicago-based Coming of Age, Inc.: Interactive Baby Boomer & Senior Marketing, offers quotes from advertising “wizard” and “father of advertising” David Ogilvy who died in 1999:

·         “I do not regard advertising as entertainment or an art form, but as a medium of information. When I write an advertisement, I don’t want you to tell me that you find it ‘creative.’ I want you to find it so interesting you buy the product.”

·         “You aren’t advertising to a standing army; you are advertising to a moving parade.”

·         “Specifics work better than generalities. When research reported that the average shopper thought Sears Roebuck made a profit of 37% on sales, I headlined an advertisement ‘Sears makes a profit of 5%.’ This specific was more persuasive than saying that Sears’ profit was ‘less than you might suppose’ or something equally vague.”

·         “What is a good advertisement? An advertisement which pleases you because of its style or an advertisement which sells the most? They are seldom the same.”

·         “There have always been noisy lunatics on the fringes of the advertising business. Their stock-in-trade includes ethnic humor, eccentric art direction, contempt for research, and their self-proclaimed genius. They are seldom found out, because they gravitate to the kind of clients who, bamboozled by their rhetoric, do not hold them responsible for sales results.”

·         “Big ideas come from the unconscious. This is true in art, in science, and in business. But your conscious has to be well informed or your idea will be irrelevant. Stuff your conscious mind with information, then unhook your rational thought process. You can help this process by going for a long walk, or taking a hot bath, or drinking half a pint of claret.”

·         “Repeat your winners. If you are lucky enough to write a good advertisement, repeat it until it stops selling. Scores of good advertisements have been discarded before they lost their potency.”

·         “Don’t keep a dog and bark yourself. Any fool can write a bad advertisement, but it takes a genius to keep his hands off a good one.”

·         “When people read your copy, they are alone. Pretend you are writing each of them a letter on behalf of your client. One human being to another, second person singular.”

·         “The best way to improve the sale of a product is to improve the product.”

·         “They (general advertisers) worship at the altar of creativity, which really means originality — the most dangerous word in the lexicon of advertising.”

·         “When you advertise fire-extinguishers, open with fire.”

Read this in full.

Also see our blogpost, “The Advertising Mind of David Ogilvy.”

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you advertise effectively to your target market.

And be sure to bookmark and use daily the SomersaultNOW online dashboard for publishing and marketing professionals.

50 Ways Under $50 To Promote Your Book

Penny C. Sansevieri, CEO and founder of Author Marketing Experts, Inc. (@Bookgal), offers 50 ideas for inexpensive book promotion, such as

·         Buy your domain name as soon as you have a title for your book.

·         Head on over to Blogger.com or Wordpress.com and start your very own blog.

·         Set up an event at your neighborhood bookstore. Do an event and not a signing, book signings are boring!

·         Create an email signature for every email you send; email signatures are a great way to promote your book and message.

·         Start a Twitter account and begin tweeting.

Read this in full.

Also see “Promote Your Book on a Budget: 20 Thrifty Ways to Get Your Writing Out There” and “Promoting your book on a budget: A response to BookBaby” by Suw Charman-Anderson (@Suw).

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you plan and execute your marketing strategy.

And be sure to bookmark and use daily the SomersaultNOW online dashboard.

Wattpad, Fanado, and the Value of Taking Risks

GigaOM (@gigaom) senior writer Mathew Ingram (@mathewi) reports on 72-year-old Canadian author Margaret Atwood’s (@MargaretAtwood) involvement with Wattpad (@wattpad) (blog) and Fanado (@Fanadoevents).

Wattpad is a Toronto, Ontario-based...online writing community with more than 3 million users and over 5 million pieces of content uploaded to the network....

Instead of just uploading books, many members of Wattpad’s community upload unfinished chapters that are still in development, or pieces of poetry they need feedback on, and then get comments and advice from other users of the service — both other writers and readers....

In addition to her work with Wattpad, Atwood is one of the founding artists involved with a startup called Fanado, which is trying to raise funds through the crowdfunding service Indiegogo (@Indiegogo) in order to launch a kind of digital-community platform for artists....

The idea behind Fanado is to give authors tools that they can use to interact with fans remotely, including the ability to share live video and audio of readings or get-togethers with a community, and to autograph and distribute both electronic books and printed books, as well as CDs and other offerings related to a work. In some ways, Fanado is the logical extension of an earlier project that Atwood was involved in, which led to the development of an electronic book-signing device called the “LongPen (@Syngrafii) — which authors could use to sign physical books in remote locations while on a virtual book tour.

Read this in full.

Read the Fanado news release (pdf).

See book patrol’s (@bookpatrol) post, “Fanado: The LongPen Still Lives."

Also see our blogpost, "Authors Can Now Personalize Messages in Ebooks."

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you plan and execute strategy to bring authors and readers together.

And be sure to bookmark and use daily the SomersaultNOW online dashboard.

How My Book Became A (Self-Published) Best Seller

Forbes (@Forbes) senior editor Deborah L. Jacobs (@djworking) offers insights she learned in successfully self-publishing her non-fiction book.

Digital technology has made it possible for anyone to publish a book….But turning that book into a successful commercial venture is far more challenging. For more than one year after self-publishing my book, Estate Planning Smarts, promoting it was practically my full-time job.

I didn’t take the decision to self-publish lightly. In fact, I turned down offers from two big publishers because I wasn’t happy with the money they offered. McGraw-Hill’s offer was missing a zero—and I told them so.

...The reason for publishers’ low offers was that statistics show estate planning books don’t sell well. I had a vision for a book that would prove them wrong, but the big companies would never have allocated the resources to produce it.

My business model involved going against the grain by spending money where big publishers are cutting corners: high-quality paper, two-color graphics, printing on a Web press, rather than print-on-demand. And while big publishers were cutting experienced staff, I retained top talent for editing and graphics, on a freelance basis. The goal was to produce a high-quality product that advisers would give to their clients and friends and family would share with each other.

Read this in full.

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you publish and market your content in this fast-changing digital age.

And be sure to bookmark and use daily the SomersaultNOW online dashboard;especially the Publishers tab that includes links to self-publishing services.

Infographic: The CMO's Guide To Inbound (Discovery) Marketing

The above Infographic (enlarge it) is by Marketo (@marketo).

According to this article on All Twitter (@alltwtr), inbound marketing is the concept of “capturing the attention of prospects and helping them find your brand (or products) before they're ready to buy. This can be done in a variety of ways, but search, content marketing, and, increasingly, social media platforms such as Twitter and Facebook, are found to be the most effective.”

The approach differs from traditional marketing in that the campaign makes it easier for leads to find the brand, as opposed to the other way around.

A successful inbound marketing strategy will usually implement the following:

1. The creation of a central theme to anchor efforts each month

2. The creation of 2-3 small pieces of content around said theme

3. Regular updates on social media channels to get the word out about this content

4. The production of one major piece of content to support the theme

5. Blogging

6. Analysis and optimization

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you plan and execute effective inbound marketing strategy for your brand.

And be sure to bookmark and use daily the SomersaultNOW online dashboard.

Social Media News Release Template Step-by-Step Guide

Sally Falkow (@sallyfalkow), president of PRESSfeed (@PRESSfeed) says journalists look for multimedia content to help them report a story. She offers 15 steps to crafting a successful social media news release:

·         Write a short, concise headline....

·         Add a main image that tells the story....

·         Craft the lead paragraph with the news angle and the 5Ws....

·         List the core news facts in the release in bullet points....

·         Write the rest of the release in narrative form....

·         Link to relevant analyst coverage....

·         Add approved quotes from the main players in the release....

·         Make the release available in an RSS news feed....

·         Add more images, so that there is a choice for bloggers and journalists....

·         If possible, add a short video....

·         Add any other supporting material: charts, slide decks, pdfs, Infographics or whitepapers....

·         Tag all the content with the keywords that will make it easy to find in search or social sites....

·         Add the About Us boilerplate....

·         Include a contact person – a real person....

·         Add icons that connect to all social content for the company....

Read this in full.

Get the above Infographic.

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help plan your brand’s public relations and social media news strategy.

And be sure to bookmark and use daily the SomersaultNOW online dashboard.

The Importance of Building Your Platform

Chairman of Thomas Nelson Publishers (@ThomasNelson), Michael Hyatt’s (@MichaelHyatt) new book is Platform: Get Noticed in a Noisy World (#PlatformBook). It offers practical advice for anyone who wants to effectively communicate any kind of a message in today’s media-saturated world.

He says properly building a platform for your brand (either you or an entity you represent) provides visibility (elevation above the crowd), amplification (extend your reach to people who want to hear you), and connection (engage people with relevant and valuable information).

Hyatt maintains an active blog and Twitter stream. He says it took him 4 years to attract more than 1,000 readers a month, but today he has more than 300,000 visitors (and 130,000 Twitter followers). Read his post, “4 Insights I Gleaned from Building My Own Platform.”

Hyatt also conducted a teleseminar for Platform. You can hear it here.

Contact Somersault (@smrsault) to help you strategically and effectively build your platform.

And be sure to bookmark and use daily the SomersaultNOW online dashboard.