I have been trying to record some of the sessions at PodCampOhio but since my lovely Nokia N95 8GB isn’t working with 3G (thanks, AT&T 3G for breaking on me), I have been doing my best using Qik with EDGE, which sucks. The good news is that I was able to record quite a little bit of Jennifer Laycock’s session on how to get your podcast to go viral and how to do online promotion and blogger outreach. Jennifer is a guru and an expert and I am damned glad to know her! The session below was called “Orchestrating a Viral Explosion.”

Unfortunately, I only recorded six-minutes of the session… From the session notes:

Everyone wants the benefits of a viral campaign, but few people really understand how to put the pieces together to create the best chance for success. Find out the most common mistakes companies make when aiming to go viral and how a little bit of brainstorming can set you up for success. Jennifer Laycock will walk you through the actual brainstorming process she uses with clients to help you gather information needed to put things together. She’ll also help you learn to identify “key influencers” within your industry and will offer concrete tips on the best way to approach them with your campaign.

Via Chris Abraham

One great thing about owning a Social Media PR firm is that I get to do cool stuff. Another great thing is that I can bogart some of the stuff. Well, I am number-one box of the Life Changing Box, which you can see over on my Facebook Profile! (Please feel free to add me) I will be holding onto the box for a full eight hours today, so feel free to “touch my box.” You know you want to — and you don’t have to go “through” me — feel free to just join up yourself directly! I have a feeling that you can add the app to your Facebook Pages as well — check it out! Via Chris Abraham.

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I just asked a question via Twitter. And I’ll repeat it here.

Question for social media types…many complain about interference from legal dept. when it comes to social media, especially with UGC…so, are there any conferences, events, seminars, etc. that bring the two groups together to understand one another more?

Not to toot my own horn, but that’s a good question. And it’s one that needs to be answered.

Marketers are essentially in charge of defining, promoting, enhancing, and protecting the brand. Lawyers are essentially in charge of protecting the entity, the business, and, yes, the brand.

I got to thinking about this because social media strategists often, as part of their strategy, enlist, encourage, or allow a brands users to play a role in the branding. I got to thinking of a recent story involving a group of car enthusiasts putting together a picture calendar showing off their cars. They calendars were to be sold on CafePress. But there was some sort of communication screw up and it was halted I believe. Some social media strategists mistakenly blamed the car company.

But then I thought…wait…if the legal department did have reservations in this situation, is that necessarily a bad thing? Think about it….

What if one of the participants of an unsolicited consumer generated media effort has let’s say a problem. Like a police record. I mean, let’s say he’s the type of guy who could get nailed by Chris Hansen of Nightline. You know, a pedophile.

Ridiculous? If you think so, you’re missing the point. The point is that legal department and marketing departments are going to have to understand one another and work together to both reasonably promote and protect the brand through social media. Cutting edge vs. overly cautious won’t do. Lawyer potentially nixing or at least getting in the way of potentially effective programs or frustrated marketing types angrily rolling their eyes at the stupidity and interference of the legal department will only serve to stifle the brand, or, potentially worse, leave it unprotected.

Naked Conversations gives a transparent look into why your business may have a company webpage but have yet to form real relationships with individuals in the blogosphere—an increasingly growing online community. Chapters within the text reveal valid reasons why small and large companies need to start being honest and reaching out to their customers.

Robert Scoble and Shel Israel illustrate a new revolution in their text by pointing out that blogging has already begun to change the social landscape of media communication. We are living in age where every second of every day is a missed opportunity if you do not promote your business through an integration of media outlets.

The authors’ state that company blogs are a tool and the return on investment is that new and returning customers will see a sincere human being who cares about their business and reputation. They also reaffirm that if someone has not being open, honest, or cool about a company product, the blogosphere or global network of fact checkers has the right to say something about it.

The communication revolution moves from an impersonal, controlled one-way model of communication into a decentralized interactive, constantly regenerating conversation. Word-of-mouth is a phrase reverberated throughout the text and can be visualized within the recounts of successful blogs like GM Fast lane, English Cuts-Savile Row suits, and Treonauts by Andrew Carton. Each has learned that customer evangelists have the ability to jump start excitement and dole out advice if your product is not quite remarkable just yet.

Why are so many companies afraid of conversational marketing? The authors explain that many individuals care so much their product they are afraid to gamble on all the hard work that has already been put into the business.

Time consumption, legal concerns, negative comments, clash with PR firm, giving away competitive information, and getting fired are all valid apprehensions but can be deterred by remembering key advice that not only the authors but regulars readers of Naked Conversation Blog agreed that the tips given in Chapter 11 Doing It Right would ease new and inexperienced individuals into the blogosphere. A blogging plumber you say?

The Corporate Weblog Manifesto in Chapter 12 has over 30 great comments about the principles of corporate blogging from experienced bloggers as well.

Now here is the honest part of this review if you are still reading. After finishing the text, my subjective view is that your company should create a blog about your brand if it has not been done already because it gives you DIRECT ACCESS to potential and returning customers. Keep your corporate leadership priorities straight and only blog when you can and give up the duties to employees or emerging online pr companies that want to see the highest level of excellence from your product(s).

Remember you are not late to the game, it has just started, so jump in and get your feet wet. Have OPENNESS & HONESTY & (be) COOL– showcase exactly why your brand is remarkable because blogging allows the opportunity to the change the entire perception with the click of the mouse and tap of the keyboard. Customer evangelist will come to your assistance if someone calls your product unremarkable.

I think readers will enjoy this book for an over view of why blogs are necessary for business reputation and encourage the customer evangelist in all of us. (‘Because we are living in a material world’… ok I’m back from 1985 or just watched a scene from Moulin Rouge).

Scoble and Israel stated in the final paragraph of the book that blogging has ended an era of one way communication and companies are not just talking to consumers anymore. Two-way conversation allows customers an all exclusive, backstage VIP pass to give thoughts and feedback on products and brands in the market right now. Businesses no longer have to wonder why a product is not interesting consumers when focus groups state they have explored all avenues. CEO John Doe can go online and pose the question on a blog or in message forums and get answers from the individuals with money to spend.

Blogs must be seen as tools and corporations must see that markets are available for conversation. The Conversation Era is here but the conversations have only just begun.

The Washington Post is pointing out that, once again, passionate grassroots support is outperforming traditional top-down marketing. And the weapon of choice appears to be email. It may just affect who will end up being the next president of the United States.

GOP presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, former governor of Arkansas and Baptist minister, has had some extraordinary help from volunteers - some of whom aren’t directly involved in the campaign - who are tapping into their network of church goers and like minded citizens. This is a classic example of key influencers at work, using word of mouth to effectively spread the word about Huckabee’s stances…particularly about home schooling.

A very telling part as to why this is amazing is that the previous frontrunner in the state, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney had aired 5,000 televison commercials in the first nine months of the year. In the same time period, Huckabee’s team had aired not even one. Now, Romney is behind.

Those of us in social media constantly talk about tapping into the community. I’ve often had doubts about that. Not because the concept wasn’t sound…but because , quite often , there wasn’t a community to be tapped into. Here there is.

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