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Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Social Media - a veritable mine field!

A minefield
   

So – last week I went to a conference/training day on social media in attempt to drag myself into something resembling a 21st century engaged person.  But knowledge can be a dangerous thing; I emerged after 9 hours of intensive hotel conferencing, in the ballroom no less – wondering where the day had gone (it was dusk) and worse, having developed a strong craving for an expensive iphone 4.

It’s ironic because only the day before I’d been happy with my Nokia. I could read my emails on it, make calls, surf the internet (slowly) and access all my contact information. But then I learned that with an iphone 4 I could be doing so much more! Downloading zillions of apps, experiencing the impossibly cool new iphone barcodes that appear on brochures, menus and things, creating my own photo tours on ‘Trover’, filming then easily uploading funky video clips from the phone onto my blog – or Facebook page if I had one - (using iloader and imovie), enjoying ‘location based services’ city tours with 3d maps, ‘this way’ arrows, tags, restaurant reviews and information popping up on my screen as I go. Sigh.

The training was actually targeted really at those in the tourism business who need to make their online presence felt, who today are compelled to deal with sites like TripAdvisor –  the conference was organised by these guys: http://www.e-tourismfrontiers.com/ but I tooled along in my ‘private’ capacity because I thought it might be interesting. I hoped my cover wouldn't be blown, that the 150 other professional delegates wouldn’t identify me as a sad old interloper/gatecrasher with a highly spurious agenda, 'a blogger' in other words.

Uploading all that information into my brain was mind boggling, however, now that I’ve had a few days to let it all sink in I think I can convey a little of what I learned. Apologies if I’ve got some of it wrong... I’m still learning!

Shall I tell you all my secrets? Well, here we go, here's a little of what I learned:

Social networking - If you are selling anything, then you'd be nuts not to engage.

Facebook – join groups to do mass messaging and create ‘events’ to promote stuff.  Facebook currently has 500 million users.

Twitter – an online chatroom. –‘#fail’ means that you are not happy with something. To compress long web links to keep within your 140 character limit, use the website ‘Bit.ly’

Blogs – An extra tip I learned was to use Tumblr or Zapd to upload mini blogs from you mobile phone.

Viral media advertising – youtube clips that ‘go viral’ ie. they are so popular that they spread worldwide very quickly.

Funnies like this:


(this could be an advert for shampoo - got us all fooled?)
and this......
Flashmobs – People doing unusual things in public settings, hoping that passersby will record it on their mobile phones then upload it onto the internet.  It’s less crazy that you think.  Check out this, an ad for Beirut Airport's duty free shop:



UGC – User generated content is: online reviews, uploaded photos and video clips, blogs.  This is what anyone who is selling anything wants to inspire since it's free advertising, but it can also backfire.


 

This country and western singer had his guitar broken by United Airlines luggage handlers in the States.  After persuing a claim for more than a year for compensation and getting nowhere, he created this song. It been viewed online over 10.5 million times.

Creating a website

  • Make sure you make usability a priority (ie the navigation is correct), then think about search engine visibility and only finally – design (this is the least important aspect).
  • Put the most key information ‘above the fold’ on your webpage – ie, don’t make people scroll down.
  • The average number of user clicks on a website is 3 – then you’ve lost them. Use Google Analytics to work out not just how they got to you, but when you lose them and where they are going next.
  • Use hyper-links in your text to help navigate between pages. Make sure the longer title below your website name explains what it is all about in clearly defined search terms.
  • Label photographs with a names/captions etc. To help search-ability of your site. (ie don’t just leave IMG-2543.jpg). Keep your photos on online sites like Picasa, Flickr, Photobox – this also helps with your web presence. Make sure your photos are reduced in size.
  • I now know about the importance of inbound links since they drive 85% of search ranking.
  • Make sure there is a ‘Like’ button visible so that people can respond by pressing this or commenting. Also, put a Facebook icon up there too.
  • RSS feeds – people with RSS reader can be alerted when your page changes.
  • Mange your own website, don't rely on techies to do it for you since you are the one with the interest.

Search engines – A virtual ‘spider’ searches for text match, relevance, recent updates, popularity and inbound links then ranks your site accordingly
  • Avoid Splash pages – the spider cannot see past these.
  • Avoid ‘Black hat’ strategies to optimise search results such as laying under your site a page of key search words in ‘invisible’ white, or paying for somebody in India to keep clicking on your site a zillion times a day in order for it to creep up search ranking results. (frowned upon and sometimes rumbled by Google who will then make your site obsolete).
  • Use landing pages for promotions etc.

I'm ashamed to say that there was so much more but I have to admit, I'm running out of steam.
So now it seems that Africa expat should sign up for Facebook and Twitter at the very least, launch a new 'search optimised' Africa Expat Wives Club.com site (on it).  I should certainly use more multi-media in my blogs and fewer words/less bulky text and also update more often.  But are there enough hours in the day I ask you!!??

You might, like me, want to run and hide from the whole social media revolution but the bad news is that it's happening - and it's not going away!

7 comments:

  1. Anonymous6:54 pm

    not less words please. I hate blogs with massive pictures and nothing else. Especially safari blogs that display multiple images of a lion sleeping, thats why there's flickr

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous1:10 pm

    I have no intention of reading your blog on or via facebook or twitter or whatever else is the next temporary craze. I will happily continue reading it if you write interesting stories that are well written and which give me useful/entertaining insights on living in Kenya.

    I also assume (?) that most of your readers are not e.g. 16-21 and so, unless you want to target that readership, I think you need to continue writing for and to the readership you will naturally attract.

    Accessibility is important, but quality content is key.

    Enough of my lecture. Now, for something far more important: what was your cover for winging it into the conference?!

    ;)

    ReplyDelete
  3. It is about time! And for the readers out there, I need help with finding a GPS up-loadable map of Nairobi/Kenya. Or a GPS receiver with the map already uploaded. Any help will be greatly appreciated. Not sure if my Tom Tom will work in Kenya.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anon 1, thanks for the heads up on tiresome lion pictures.

    Anon 2, thanks for the lecture - as to winging it into the conference, I paid!! (sad really - but still really glad I went!)

    A - TomTom does work in Kenya. We bought one online mostly for use while on leave in UK - but my husband was using it when we got back here. Buy the kenya map and download it from Tomtom themselves, it's not expensive. The worrying thing is that we've now lost/mislaid our Tomtom and are heading back to UK shortly - help!!

    p.s. There's a good Nairobi A-Z that you can buy from most bookstores here.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous7:36 pm

    Don't.don't go on Facebook - you might not be aloud home! D.

    ReplyDelete
  6. D - a bit harsh!

    Though I did read in The Week magazine, Facebook might have lost it's novelty factor. 100,000 british users and 6 million American users logged off last month.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous12:37 am

    i dont quite agree fully. kenya has done much to encourage growth of technology. however, they have forgotten that ict is about communications at the speeds of light and not zero rating computers per se. Look at great contents like the http://www.lovepot.com - africas top love resource, but where is the incentive from gok. no where..so users end up waiting for pages to load and dont bother anymore..they go back to traditional cultures and taboo of approach in life as they wont notice what fast comms can do for them. kenya gok still asleep..while the west is now toying wih the notion of future internet..and what it really could be like? computers will be obsolete in a few yrs. no one will use them..comms will take over. there will be just about 9 computers world wide..to serve the continents...mobile phones too will be gone with the computers...its coming very fast.

    rgds
    TheBull

    ReplyDelete