Archive for category Social Marketing
Facebook expands to cater the growth
Posted by River Ho in Featured, Social Marketing, Web Business on February 27th, 2009
Facebook is planning to expand double their staff. Here is the snapshot of showing a 11% of market share growth in just half year.

Matt Cutts apologized for Google.co.jp paid for writers
Posted by River Ho in Featured, Social Marketing on February 16th, 2009
Seeding post is so natural to advertiser choice right now. Digital PR is pushing that. When less people who really knows how to drive buzz, seeding post and paid article will become a norm.
Photo credit: http://www.webpronews.com/
Related: Asiajin blog
WSJ Video Sharing: P2P Economic
Posted by River Ho in Featured, Social Marketing, Web Business on February 2nd, 2009
An interesting special report about p2p economic.
Ride Nonstop Viral Buzz to Triple-Digit Revenue Growth: 7 Strategies
Posted by River Ho in Featured, Social Marketing on January 6th, 2009
source: Sharing from Marketingsherpa (http://www.marketingsherpa.com/)
Photo credit: Flickr, http://www.flickr.com/photos/fenchurch/
7 Strategies to Riding a Wave of Viral Buzz
Strategy #1: Stay true to core values
Etsy’s sellers and buyers share a strong affinity for handmade goods. The company strives to maintain those core values in all of their marketing efforts. This builds strong ties with members, who suggest the service to like-minded peers.
Striving for creativity also makes Etsy interesting and easier to talk about. Their unique applications for organizing products and presenting them to buyers help to boost their buzz.
Strategy #2: Approach challenges differently
Selling products and promoting an event through best practices gives your company a solid foundation — but nothing is cast in stone. Etsy takes risks in their creative approaches to marketing, especially their merchandising.
Many of Etsy’s 2.4 million handmade products are one-of-a-kind. “Most people that come to the site don’t really know what they’re looking for, which poses a challenge,” Ferreira says. To combat that issue, in addition to standard categories and search features, Etsy offers highly visual ways to browse products.
- Shop by color: Shoppers can use an interactive color palette to view products with desired colors. The palette is a grid of multi-colored dots that expand and gradually fade when moused over, creating a visual experience. After a color is selected, a pile–not a list–of products appears.
- Time machine: Images of the most recently purchased products are organized into a vortex-like spiral. Clicking and dragging the images pulls them into view and reveals when they were sold. There is also another time machine, organized into a grid, that reveals the products most recently uploaded and soon to expire.
- Treasuries: Users can organize a treasury of select items they like. Other users can comment on treasuries and offer suggestions.
- Geo locator: An interactive globe highlights the location of the 100 most recently purchased items. When clicked, the globe reveals the items’ images.
Strategy #3: Get more from your resources
Etsy collects fees when products are listed and when they are sold, making their sellers a vital resource. Ferreira and her team provide tools for sellers to further their craft and their business. This is a service that, in turn, helps Etsy.
- Virtual labs: The labs provide live workshops and online classes on topics, such as store management and presentation. The lab also works as an interactive space where members can set up events, get their store critiqued by experts and stream live video how-tos.
- Resources: Etsy provides an array of images members can use to spruce up their stores and profiles. Images informing the visitors that the store owner is “on vacation” or that there is a “sale today” help with promotion. There are also printable flyers for promoting offline, and a directory of business-related links.
- Teams: Members can collaborate on marketing, events, creation, promotion and more.
- Cooperative advertising: Ferreira and her team do not buy much print advertising. When they do, they sell half of the ad to their sellers. For example, if they buy a full-page ad in a magazine, half of the ad will feature 30 spots for sellers to display their goods for about $50 to $100 a spot. The other half promotes Etsy as a marketplace.
Strategy #4: Use external and internal social networks — no preference
Esty fans organize themselves on social networks, such as Facebook and Ning, Ferreira says. They’re particularly fond of the social image site Flickr, due to its visual nature.
Etsy also has ways for users to interact on their own site, such as:
- Chats
- Forums
- Teams: Members can have profile pages, send messages to each other and organize meetings
- Virtual labs
Rather than focusing on either external or internal social networks, Etsy encourages their members to gather where they prefer. While Ferreira and her team provide plenty of tools to interact on their site, they’re happy if members connect elsewhere.
Strategy #5: Give them something to talk about
Etsy’s creative features are great for attracting new members. Ferreira and her team have several ways to keep the conversation going:
- Regularly updated, high-quality blog
- 5 email newsletters
- Partnerships with other blogs to trade content
- Buying online ads from blogs
Blogs typically attract and host more conversations than traditional publications. When Ferriera and her team want to promote an event on their site, they’ll buy display ads on blogs related to the topic and crafts in general. They buy ads only to promote events, and do not continually run ads, Ferreira says.
Strategy #6: Go where the audience is
Etsy’s core members regularly attend craft fairs. Ferriera and her team do the same – they travel across the county to introduce their service to new sellers and buyers, and to maintain their presence in the industry.
Keeping to Etsy’s core values, Ferriera and her team hand out handmade tote bags, lip balms and other goodies to their craft-fair booth’s visitors. They also bring sellers to the fairs to talk to people about their goods and experiences with Etsy. Their signs are handmade.
“The challenge is that we don’t have consistent branding, but everyone does notice that ‘Hey, there’s Etsy, and they’re authentic and this is what they stand for.’ It makes it pretty clear.”
Strategy #7: Go for publicity
Free press is great for generating buzz. This is the situation Ferreira and her team find themselves in.
Etsy’s approach and values make an interesting story and their products are visually stimulating. Their pictures look great in print and their products look great on TV. They’ve been featured in a host of publications and television programs.
Useful Links related to this article:
Etsy Creative Samples
http://www.marketingsherpa.com/cs/etsy/study.html
‘Pimped-Out’ Microsite Triggers Viral Explosion
http://www.marketingsherpa.com/article.php?ident=30777
Viral Email Nets 100% Response from Brand Champs
http://www.marketingsherpa.com/article.php?ident=30752
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/16/magazine/16Crafts-t.h
http://www.etsy.com/
Facebook Becomes Largest Online Photo Storage Site – MarketingVOX
Posted by River Ho in Featured, Social Marketing, Special, Web Business on October 19th, 2008
Huh? Facebook becomes number 1 of photo sharing, not even they have thought thru how to monetize the whole thing.
Facebook Becomes Largest Online Photo Storage Site – MarketingVOX
What I learn from the case of facebook is the power of usability. Myspace and flickr are the absolute first movers but the experience is far from satisfied. No matter you talk about album, upload method(sophisticated? who cares!!), big storage or tag, these functions never come close to your life. Facebook has captured the most important thing in photo sharing: multiple way communications. Be more precise, it enable you comment on other’s photos at ease. You know all photos that shared inside your circle, you know what other people comment your photo, you can even comment on your friend’s friends photos (this never happened in other community). Sneak view is interesting enough to encourage users to share over facebook.
Social Media Measurement
Posted by River Ho in Social Marketing, Web Business, Web Marketing Know-how on July 13th, 2008