Archive for the 'Social Media' Category Page 2 of 5



Brad Howe Interview: In Morgantown this Thursday

Brad Howe, Assistant Athletic Director, WVUOne of our two “rock star” speakers this Thursday in Morgantown is WVU Assistant Athletic Director Brad Howe.   He took time out of his day…er night, that is, to answer some questions to give potential attendees an idea of what he’ll be speaking about.  Just as in Charleston last week, attendees will get the chance to ask Brad questions as well.  Go Mountaineers!

1. What has been the biggest change you’ve seen in how universities market and promote their sports programs since you started out at UConn?

The internet is biggest change. When I started at UConn in ‘93 the internet/email was in the very early stages (if we even had it all – I can’t remember ever using it at UConn in the beginning). Now, it is generally the first medium we think of when deciding how to best promote one of our games/events.

We still promote our events through traditional vehicles, but the internet is the one we think of first. It allows the most flexibility and the best opportunity to hit the most people during the course of a day.

2. How are you moving the WVU athletic department forward in terms of new methods of advertising, marketing, public relations, and measuring their effectiveness?

We are constantly looking at new ideas for our web site. Recently, we have started adding more video features to the site. We receive instant feedback with our web site via the traffic. We can see right away if something we did on there was well received. That is tougher with traditional television, radio or print advertising.
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Governor Manchin Emails State RE: Daughter’s WVU MBA Scandal

Post from: Direct Online Marketing Blog

Governor Manchin Emails State RE: Daughter’s WVU MBA Scandal

Alright,

Now I’m convinced the higher ups at WVU and in West Virginia State government are reading my blog and attending our Next Generation Marketing conferences.

I’m not going to go through the whole spiel again, but be aware that this article is written in a non-biased fashion meant to take a deeper look at the Heather Bresch pr crisis from an academic standpoint. Careful readers should be able to learn several ways to combat their own bad press. boom goes the dynamite

For organizations with robust search engine reputation management and online pr crisis response needs, please contact us to discuss your options and develop a plan. We accept checks and all major credit cards and operators are standing by. Plus, call within the next 15 minutes and receive a free genuine ginsu link building plan.

You must understand two things:

1. You cannot bury your head in the sand. The conversation will happen. The question is: do you want to join it?

2. It is a million times easier to respond to pr crises with a proper plan in place before the dynamite goes boom.

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Referrals and Service Recovery

At Next Generation Marketing, we recently presented a great deal of information about referrals. I wanted to share some additional information and resources about this important topic. It’s worth a deeper look.

We all know that people live, socialize and communicate within networks … and today across social networks such as blogs, forums, e-mail, Twitter, Facebook, etc. People talk about their kids, hobbies, their vacation destinations and their favorite sports teams; naturally people also share their experiences as consumers.

Studies prove this. The Coca-Cola Company conducted a study in the late 1960’s and found that a highly satisfied customer is likely to tell four to five people, on average, about a positive experience. On the other hand, a bad experience will also be communicated—to an even greater extent. Coke learned that a dissatisfied customer is likely to spread the bad news to nine or 10 people.

Such information provides substantial motivation to the business owner to seek out and repair customer complaints. In fact, such situations create an opportunity for a company to inspire a loyal, engaged customer. (Remember, you cannot convert a customer to a loyal advocate. You have to inspire them to become advocates.)

When a company successfully recovers from a service snafu (i.e., makes it right for the customer and successfully addresses the situation), it can be a very powerful experience. The Coca-Cola study found that in service recovery situations the consumer is likely to share the news of the resolved problem with nine to 15 people. Today with the prevalence of social networking tools the numbers are likely multiplied. Still, the ratios are likely to remain intact.

As Justin Seibert explained: “You only have two opportunities to make a good first impression. One occurs upon initial contact; the other occurs after you’ve screwed up (and fixed things).”

Practicing What We Preach: LinkedIn Social Networking

All attendees to our conference series throughout West Virginia will receive follow up emails with various information. (Huntington, you’ll get one shortly confirming with best selling marketing book you’d like to receive).

LinkedInIn these emails, you will receive ways to get in touch with the speakers in case you had any specific questions you didn’t want to address in a public setting or thought of afterwards. In the meantime, please feel free to learn more about us and join our LinkedIn networks:

We look forward to continuing our discussions with you and again thank you for all your attention, contributions, support, and feedback.

Extreme Online Reputation Management: WVU, Mylan, & Governor’s Office Edition

Post from: Direct Online Marketing Blog

 

In getting ready for the Next Generation Marketing series across West Virginia this spring, I began thinking about my presentation on Engagement and Dialogue. In it, I will go over the premise and some recommendations for online reputation management. The last time I spoke about that publicly was at the Online Marketing: Innovations that Work marketing conference in Southpointe, PA when I delivered They Said What? Protect Your Reputation with Search Engine Marketing.

I really want to do a post on the subject – if only there were some really big public scandal involving reputations being changed on the internet that involved West Virginia and the Pittsburgh, PA area. Hmmm. Let’s see. [shuffles through piles of old newspapers by desk - who needs the internet?]

Oh that’s right – how about Heather Bresch? Do a search on her name, particularly a news search, and see what you come up with. For those readers either too lazy to do the search or too enthralled with my hypnotic musings (read: put you in a catatonic state), it comes down to the following:

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