Verizon an ISP, Phone Co, Cable Co or What?

Verizon To Launch New Media Service in July 2011

From the beat of the Digital Drummer, Jim Neusom…

Verizon announces new media utility – that streams to Any device, On any platform, At any time, On demand http://bit.ly/gKxpRG Hmmm is Verizon an ISP, Phone Co, Cable Co..or What???

Entrepreneur, tech and marketing blogger, Jim Neusom, known on the net as the Digital Drummer, after re-posting Computerworld’s article, “Verizon to launch digital media service in July,” asked the question that is probably on all of our minds.

According to Computerworld, on Monday, April 11, 2011, Verizon announced its new media utility service, now in beta with nine charter content-creation companies, will be available for commercial release sometime in July of this year.

This new B2B is designed to help advertising, media and entertainment companies automate delivery of on-demand content to consumers on their TVs, smartphones and tablets…

Well, Jim, I’m sure Verizon realized it is no longer a monoloply in the telecommunications industry, and that it must diversify to stay competitive. What better way than maxizmizing and leveraging its available resources.

After the launch of Verizon’s websites for small businesses, it appears Verizon, along with the banking, advertising, and many other industries, is going for increase of the small business market share. For years, Verizon’s Centrex service was the dominent business phone service. Well, Centrex came to be a costly service that was hard to budget. As a consequence, small to mid-size businesses sought more economical options. Then, as deregulation and access to technology grew, so did Verizon’s competition. At first almost no companies could compete with Centrex’s features and ease of programming, but by early 2000, competition in the small business market grew while Verizon’s superb quality tech  support began to dissipate.

Businesses as opposed to residents, are much more loyal in their telecommunications providers. Now as television and advertising emerge more cost effectively across telecommunication platforms, kudos to Verizon for making some great strategic moves to stay competitive and revelant.

David Rips, president of Verizon Digital Media Services, states, “We are going to be the world’s first fully automated, end-to-end digital media utility that generates enormous economies of scale and true unicast [media] streams to any device, on any platform, at any time that consumers want it, on demand.” Read more at Computerworld http://bit.ly/gKxpRG

10 Steps to Facebook Success for Your Non-Profit Organization

Another great article from MarketingProfs.com. Written by John Haydon of Inbound Zombie, the article not only applies to non-profits, but is also adaptable to independent artists.

FYI: Facebook has upgraded its FanPages. If you need support in leveraging Facebook fanpage to increase your conversion, please contact Jacqueline Taylor-Adams at (215) 774-1237, info@tayloradams.biz, or simplybuildingbrandingandbiz@gmail.com.

10 STEPS TO FACEBOOK SUCCESS FOR YOUR NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION

If you’re like most non-profit marketers, you’re trying to use Facebook to raise awareness and donations. You’ve set up an account, tried to grow your number of connections, and posted some content for people to comment on. In the first month or two, your fan base grew steadily. You were excited, and your board was excited. But now, getting the results you originally hoped for isn’t quite as easy.

Fan growth has flattened, your post quality has dropped, and board members are asking, “What’s going on with Facebook?” The good news is that you’re not alone—the Facebook honeymoon ends at some point for everyone. Now is the perfect time to review the critical steps for success on Facebook.

1. Have a Plan.
Be very clear about goals, expectations, and roles. The clearer you can paint your “picture of success” on Facebook, the more likely it will manifest.

2. Ask Yourself, “What’s Your Thing?
Rebecca Leaman wrote a post about a one-page social media plan created by Jay Baer. The plan requires marketing to ask, “What’s your thing?” What is the single thing about your nonprofit that is truly defining and interesting? When you ask your supporters why they support your organization—the reason in their hearts—what’s their answer?

3. Create a Page—Not a Profile.
Profiles are for people; Pages are for orgs. Not a Community Page—those are for experiences, like eating Nutella with a tablespoon. Not a Group. Groups are for your constituents to organize around an idea.

4. Create a Custom Landing Tab.
Once you’ve created a Page, make it stand out with a custom welcome tab. Pages that have custom welcome tabs have a higher new fan conversion rate than Pages that don’t.

Independent Artists: make sure your custom landing page includes your art. I realize many of you may be saying, “duh,” but you’d be surpised how many artists have profiles that speak everything about their art with no sample of their artwork (ie images, music poetry, film, dance, performance video, etc)! –J. Taylor-Adams

5. Less Is More.
Not using the Discussions tab? Remove it from the tabs by editing the application settings. Same goes for the Events tab and the Reviews tab. You can always turn them back on.

6. Leverage Your Avatar.
Facebook provides up to 600 × 200 pixels of space for your main image. Use that real estate to your advantage. Try including a call to action like the Brain Aneurysm Foundation did. Or outline action steps in your current campaign like Oceana did.

7. Get the Word Out.
Leverage your assets. For example, if you have a large email list, send them a well-written email with reasons for joining your Page. Or if you have an active Ning community, create an event in Ning that promotes a discussion on the new Page Wall.

8. Use Your Page as a Platform for Dialogue.
Don’t use it just as a place to put useless stuff.

9. Measure, Rinse, Repeat.
You will only get better at Facebook if you know what works and what doesn’t. Facebook Pages include a few reports that will show you how good your content is, if you’re posting too frequently, and how much they’re sharing. Also, use Google Analytics to measure traffic from Facebook to your website.

10. Create a Facebook Skunkworks.
Put together a small task force in your organization to reflect on Facebook results, discuss how to improve, and brainstorm novel uses of Facebook. Include a few Page connections in this group as well. Talk to each other face to face—not by email.

John Haydon is chief heretic and pyrotechnician of Inbound Zombie.


5 Directional Cues for Increased Conversion

You built. They came. Now what are you going to do?

RT @ioninteractive: 5 Directional cues for increasing landing page conversions http://ow.ly/38KMR #marketing

This article is a must read for marketers and business professionals. It is so important to move to the point of conversion. Many times business professionals get so immersed in administration, product development, and attracting leads, they forget about converting them to sales.

I’d like to use an analogy by HBO Def Poet Tommy Bottoms, “It’s not how much money you make, but how much money you keep.” Applying this to marketing, its not about how much traffic you have, but about how much traffic you convert to sales.

What conversion processes do you have in place? Do you have any in place? If so, are you consistently evaluating and adjusting accordingly?

Please, make sure you take time to read and study, “5 Directional cues for increasing landing page conversions” http://ow.ly/38KMR