Social Marketing Revolution
82
Social Media Marketing Revoluiton
Follow
Scooped by Martin (Marty) Smith onto Social Marketing Revolution
Scoop.it!

3 S's of Social Media: Setup, Strategize and Schedule [Infographic]

3 S's of Social Media: Setup, Strategize and Schedule [Infographic] | Social Marketing Revolution | Scoop.it

How do you set up social media campaigns? Use the 3 S's: Setup, Strategize (and watch Key Performance Indicaors KPIs) and schedule. 

Martin (Marty) Smith's insight:

Cool, helpful infograpic about how to set up your social media campaigns. Our process is 10% different. Excellent. 

John van den Brink's curator insight, March 9, 10:16 AM

Great Infographic

Jesús Hernández's comment, March 9, 11:27 AM
Great!!!
Martin (Marty) Smith is also curating
Curation Revolution Design Revolution BI Revolution Mobile Revolution Ecom Revolution Marketing Revolution
and 9 others
Discover Topics Martin (Marty) Smith is following
Instagram Tips and Tricks The 21st Century Content Curation World Digital Cinema Tools Digital Delights for Learners Digital Delights
and 1488 others
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by Martin (Marty) Smith from Public Relations & Social Media Insight
Scoop.it!

Q: Can PR Pros Become brand journalists? A: No Q: Brand Champions? A: Maybe

Q: Can PR Pros Become brand journalists? A: No Q: Brand Champions? A: Maybe | Social Marketing Revolution | Scoop.it

I'm in Miami this week taking part in the Holmes Report's Global PR Summit and the topic of "Brand Journalism."

 

I know nothing about the subject but no one else does either because it's a made up term that is in the early stages of being defined. Nothing wrong in that, I do it all the time but I try to think of concepts that make sense and this one doesn't make any sense at all....

 

[Tom Forenski says "brand journalism" is NOT journalism. Is he right? ~ Jeff]

Marty Note
I see the need for rebranding. PR has imploded swept away by search engines and social networks. I can also understand a desire for an attachment to brands. Brands are perceived as the lasting core of marketing. I don't understand the concept of "brand journalists" since journalism is investigative and far ranging and sends shivers down the spines of most CEOs and CMOs I've worked with or for. 

Since brands are becoming more social, with much of this new work being done by brand advocates and supporters NOT people with a direct stake (employees in other words), I see a brand champion role that PR experts could help create and shape.

Perhaps the most important idea for our new PR brand marketers to understand is how much flux brands and branding are in. Take a look at this infographic about how brands are "socializing": http://www.scoop.it/t/curation-revolution/p/791811864/branding-is-changing-socializing-your-brand 


Brands and companies are changing rapidly. Here are some important ways companies and brands are changing:

* Brands and companies are becoming publishers. 

* Brands and companies are becoming curators.

* Brands and companies are becoming entertainers (Meetups, Videos, etc..).


While "Brand Journalism" may seem dissonant to what brands were and are becoming, brand curator or brand champion is a much needed missing set of marketing skills. PR skills such as building relationships with thought leaders, organizing disparate information into engaging communication, promoting engagement and connecting companies and brands to their supporters wrap around this idea quickly and well. 

PR pros could become the brand sherpas of a new more open, engaged and social branding.  Brand journalists as a concept just sends shivers down the CEOs and CMOs I've worked with (lol).  


Via LPM Comunicação SA, Jeff Domansky
Jeff Domansky's comment, October 30, 2012 11:13 PM
Liked your take Marty, but PR as "brand Sherpas"? LOL. We already too much heavy lifting.