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Spot Social Media Snake Oil Salesmen With These 10 Tips [+ 5 From Marty]

Spot Social Media Snake Oil Salesmen With These 10 Tips [+ 5 From Marty] | BI Revolution | Scoop.it
Image A lot of folks position themselves as social media “experts” but sometimes it can be difficult figuring out who really knows what they’re talking about and who’s merely a guru or a ninja.


Marty Note
I love these tips especially #3. I love it when a "Social Media Expert" has no Klout score, their last tweet was a week ago and they don't blog :).

Here are 5 of my favorite ways to separate Social Media Wheat from Chaff:


1. Ask for their favorite tool to help cut down #SMM to a working FLOOD. Any answer is correct but then ask the follow up question. How has that tool changed their process or helped achieve their social media marketing "do more with less" goal.


2. I agree with the differentiation between personal brander and corporate Internet marketer and social media expert (very differnet gigs). Ask the "expert" to tell you how they used a social tool to make a million bucks and what was the ROI.


That isn't totally fair since attribution is a bitch, but see how they handle it. If they stammer or make stuff up RUN. Internet marketing is always about THE NEXT MILLION BUCKS and if you are large enough it may be about the next $10M bucks, so make social about the money and see how they handle it.


3. Ask under what conditions they would use auto-tools like BufferApp. If they have auto-everything RUN.


4. Ask them if they believe they can manage your social stream. Correct answer here is of course but you want to see some recognition of how hard a task managing someone else's social is since it requires you understand how the company thinks and acts across a variety of situations. I've managed OPS (Other People's Social) successfully once and unsuccessfully twice.


It isn't easy, so anyone who tells you it is easy and you should RUN. BTW, I don't even consider managing social for verticals I don't have some experience in. I will NOT manage social for a woman's dress shop because I have no frame of reference and so would just be BAD at it.


5. Ask the expert how they became an expert. If you asked me how I became a social media expert I would explain I am NOT an expert. I would go on to explain I curate between 50 and 200 pieces of content a day into 4 blogs, 4 Twitter accounts and across 3 major SMM tool sets (Scoop.it, Pinterest and Facebook).


I write between 200 and 1,000 words a day that get published to 1 of 5 blogs and I try to learn something daily. When I do learn things I share them to about 10,000 people a day (give or take). I've published at least 5 articles that have gone mega-viral (Retweets greater than 200K) and I defined what constitutes social media "mega-viral" (lol).


I would go on to explain how "expert" and social media don't go naturally together. Curator, writer, creator are labels that work better than "expert" since expert implies social media has been around longer than it really has and that it is knowable enough to create "experts". Not so much, I would explain :).  


Extra Credit - Ask why they LOVE Social Media. 
I'm an Internet marketer and a merchant at my core. I love social because it is the natural evolution of Internet marketing. I love social media marketing because the feedback loops are faster, the danger and reward greater.


I love social media because I've been able to make friends with genius marketers from around the world such as maxOz (Michele Smorgon), Robin Good and Brian Yanish (@MarketingHits).


I love social because I've been able to meet Jan Gordon (Curatti), John van den Brink (@AtDotComSocial) and Liz and Kelly and my friends at @SmallRivers, the Paper.li people. I could go on and on because everyday I find something or someone new to love. 


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More Thoughts On Buildings And Food: How Entropy Is Creating Web 3.0 Under Our Noses (Redux)

More Thoughts On Buildings And Food: How Entropy Is Creating Web 3.0 Under Our Noses (Redux) | BI Revolution | Scoop.it

Wrote this piece on how Entropy is creating Web 3.0 under our noses about a month ago and it continues to get daily readership. 

Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Entropy and 2013
Little did I know how accurate this article was/is. The web and what we know as "websites" is changing. I saw a great statement today. In an article I scooped about the 20 trends of 2013 http://www.scoop.it/t/design-revolution/p/3994915454/20-web-development-and-design-trends-2013-from-creative-maniacs .

 

The article discusses the loosening of the web. Static pages defined a priori are going away. Code and systems design will replace predefined pages with pages created on the fly. 

The advantage to creating pages on the fly is HUGE. Pages are more easily tuned to their audience in the moment. You might we wondering how this would work. 

Let's say you arrive at this page from my Mobile Revolution. There is content here tagged "mobile" so that mobile content, given your previous location, would become could be re-positioned to create ScentTrail, a sense of a meaningful path. 

Visitors can branch and websites of the not very distant future will simply reform around the path. If we stand at the end of the static web on the gates of the dynamic and algorithm controlled one the ultimate destination is the fluid intuitive semantic web. 

Entropy's roll is to continue to remove organization, there is a video in the piece showing how sand is much more likely to build random piles than sand castles. The web is headed in the direction of random sand piles than sand castles.

There is another seemingly tangential reason I think entropy is inevitable. We are changing too. The web isn't passive. To interact with it is to be changed. One of my favorite books is A Whole New Mind: Why Right Brainers Will Rule The Future by Daniel Pink  http://www.danpink.com/books/whole-new-mind

 

Right brainers are creatives and left brainers are detailed oriented engineers. Pink's persuasive argument is we've engineered as far as we can. Think of the web. The pressure on Internet marketing now is NOT creation of a website anyone can do that. The pressure is in creating content that wins hearts and minds.

You see the movement from left-brain to right. The web needed to be built, but now that it is creating art is what matter most. Artists are also much more tuned to entropy. Artists routinely build and tear, tear and build. 

Entropy, the natural move from organization to randomness, favors artists and his happening faster and faster. 

I kept riffing on entropy on Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/u/0/102639884404823294558/posts/SvgmhHHKL6D  

 


How Entropy Is Creating Web 3.0 Right Under Our Noses :).
http://www.scoop.it/t/design-revolution/p/3994915454/20-web-development-and-design-trends-2013-from-creative-maniacs  

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