This month's contest involves a participant answering a few questions about their last financing experience in order to win a Kindle.
The first few days started off strong with sending out an invitation for those that lost the GPS contest to apply to the Kindle one. I gave the bad news with a twist-- Good thing you lost the GPS, now you can get the Kindle. I sent out the email right away.
Honestly, I should have held off a little longer. A friend informed me that I should have listed the winner in the email to sound more legitimate. Sorry Elton Lavin, I should have given you the proper congratulations you deserved. Lesson learned.
So for the first few days, our contest rocked-- with 100 applicants within the first few days! I thought for sure the Kindle was a prize to be sought after, and the promotion would be easier this time around.
Unfortunately, all good things must come to an end. The applicants have slowed down- to about 3 a day. This means I need to get going with more promotional efforts.
Before I jump into the waters, I need to research popular blogs about Kindles, bloggers who blog about Kindles, and the overall opinion about the Kindle. So you with me?
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Monday, October 11, 2010
Update on Last Contest
Hey, everyone.
So I have been severely lacking on the blog posts lately; a recent trip to NYC was distracting, but I'm back to let you know what happened with the GPS contest.
Our results showed more than 300 participants applied, which exceeded our predicted goal. Great news!
Some promotional ways I used on the last days were:
1) Linked-In. Generally, there is a "Promotions" page on Linked In for members of groups. I joined some groups that pertain to my job description, such as Social Media ones. From there, I posted our contest on each Promotions page. A tip would be to find a group that is affiliated with the product, and advertise on their Group Promotions page.
2) Blogs. I found some separate blogs on the Internet that were related to our prize- a GPS Navigator. This is, of course, shaky territory. I recommend promoting with sincerity and finding appropriate places to do so. For instance, I promoted the contest in a section called, "where to find the best deals on a GPS." People were actively looking to purchase a GPS, and wanted to know where to go. This means my post was not taken as spam, but rather as helpful advice. A bad area to promote a contest would be in a section entitled, "What are people's thoughts on Garmin Nuvi." People who are interested in this section will be less likely to tolerate promotions, and therefore could easily cause backlash to your brand.
3) Facebook. I actively searched for Fanpages that related to my prize- a GPS Navigator. From there, I posted on to the walls of these fanpages if I was permitted to do so. Just remember, to pace yourself with this option. Every time you write on a fanpage, it sends this information to your fans. If you do it too much, you will begin to bombard your fans with information they care little about and could potentially lose them. Another tip is to find a specific photo, update, etc on the fanpage that many people have written about. Once you write a comment to this photo and/or wall post, those individuals that have written before you will receive a notice. This is a great way to guarantee that others are looking.
Hope this information helps. I'm onto my new task- our Kindle Sweepstakes!
http://www.carfinance.com/contests
So I have been severely lacking on the blog posts lately; a recent trip to NYC was distracting, but I'm back to let you know what happened with the GPS contest.
Our results showed more than 300 participants applied, which exceeded our predicted goal. Great news!
Some promotional ways I used on the last days were:
1) Linked-In. Generally, there is a "Promotions" page on Linked In for members of groups. I joined some groups that pertain to my job description, such as Social Media ones. From there, I posted our contest on each Promotions page. A tip would be to find a group that is affiliated with the product, and advertise on their Group Promotions page.
2) Blogs. I found some separate blogs on the Internet that were related to our prize- a GPS Navigator. This is, of course, shaky territory. I recommend promoting with sincerity and finding appropriate places to do so. For instance, I promoted the contest in a section called, "where to find the best deals on a GPS." People were actively looking to purchase a GPS, and wanted to know where to go. This means my post was not taken as spam, but rather as helpful advice. A bad area to promote a contest would be in a section entitled, "What are people's thoughts on Garmin Nuvi." People who are interested in this section will be less likely to tolerate promotions, and therefore could easily cause backlash to your brand.
3) Facebook. I actively searched for Fanpages that related to my prize- a GPS Navigator. From there, I posted on to the walls of these fanpages if I was permitted to do so. Just remember, to pace yourself with this option. Every time you write on a fanpage, it sends this information to your fans. If you do it too much, you will begin to bombard your fans with information they care little about and could potentially lose them. Another tip is to find a specific photo, update, etc on the fanpage that many people have written about. Once you write a comment to this photo and/or wall post, those individuals that have written before you will receive a notice. This is a great way to guarantee that others are looking.
Hope this information helps. I'm onto my new task- our Kindle Sweepstakes!
http://www.carfinance.com/contests
Monday, September 13, 2010
GPS Contest Going Strong
Within the first week, we had a huge jump from 11 entrants to 89!!! Now, we are steadily getting people to apply, mostly from the Microsite and Twitter (Twitter does work!). This definitely surpasses our last contest. But it is not over till September 30, which means promoting is necessary.
For promoting I have followed some similar steps from before as well as made a few new ones:
1) Placed the contest widget with a related article about GPS on one of our owned microsites. From there, I submitted the link to digg.com, delicious.com, and reddit.com. There is a lot of noise on these social media sites, but the key is to follow others and build up a community. Everyday, I have been connecting and adding people to my followers. Unlike Twitter, following a number of people on reddit.com, digg.com, and delicious.com does not hurt you. Think of it like karma; you give some back, you get some back. Just remember everything takes time.
2) Tweeting it on the most popular days that I am seeing some activity. From testing, I have learned that on the weekend, actually generates more people than on the weekday. Therefore, I try to mention our contest twice during the weekend. Also, around noon to mid-afternoon seems to generate the most activity.
3) Writing articles on popular content writing websites such as Squidoo.com and Hubpages.com. First, I write an intriguing article that includes pictures, videos, and Amazon/ebay products-- generally, related to my prize. Then within the article, I include a link to the contest page. For members on those websites, they are use to and like to read intriguing content; therefore, this is the best way to advertise the contest- a link within a body of content.
If you have any contest promoting tips, please leave me a comment!
For promoting I have followed some similar steps from before as well as made a few new ones:
1) Placed the contest widget with a related article about GPS on one of our owned microsites. From there, I submitted the link to digg.com, delicious.com, and reddit.com. There is a lot of noise on these social media sites, but the key is to follow others and build up a community. Everyday, I have been connecting and adding people to my followers. Unlike Twitter, following a number of people on reddit.com, digg.com, and delicious.com does not hurt you. Think of it like karma; you give some back, you get some back. Just remember everything takes time.
2) Tweeting it on the most popular days that I am seeing some activity. From testing, I have learned that on the weekend, actually generates more people than on the weekday. Therefore, I try to mention our contest twice during the weekend. Also, around noon to mid-afternoon seems to generate the most activity.
3) Writing articles on popular content writing websites such as Squidoo.com and Hubpages.com. First, I write an intriguing article that includes pictures, videos, and Amazon/ebay products-- generally, related to my prize. Then within the article, I include a link to the contest page. For members on those websites, they are use to and like to read intriguing content; therefore, this is the best way to advertise the contest- a link within a body of content.
If you have any contest promoting tips, please leave me a comment!
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Facebook Contest Begins!
For the next contest we have decided to give away a GPS Navigation System-- the Garmin Nuvi 1350T with Lifetime Traffic included. This is definitely a larger prize than the Twitter one. First, I set up an account with Wildfire Interactive, Inc. Second, I posted all the necessary photos, content, etc. on their easy set-up page. For 100 dollars, our campaign would be promoted on their page (good for the first half of the contest, since it does slowly move down as new campaigns approach), 30 days of contest hosting, and multiple number of faucets provided -- a widget to put on our website (an orange bar promoting the contest), a Facebook page (to drive Facebook users to our fanpage), separate Twitter page (promotes people to write on their own Twitter feed that they have entered the contest), and a microsite (that we can use on our many owned urls). Looking back now, the deal was a great offer.
Also, we can easily see who came from where-- a multitude from our Twitter site and from our microsite. The contest has only been going on for 8 days now, and already 90 entrants. What a great success!
This contest was set-up differently from the last with entrants asked to answer three multiple choice answers about online financing. This offers great research to generate future content. I cannot wait to see what people say as the number one reason why they would use online financing, and the number one reason they would not use online financing (if applicable).
If someone asked me if I would recommend the Wildfire Interactive service, I would have to confidently say yes. The process was easy, and the results are there. Now all I have to do is keep it going by tweeting, posting more articles, etc.
I'll keep you updated.
Also, we can easily see who came from where-- a multitude from our Twitter site and from our microsite. The contest has only been going on for 8 days now, and already 90 entrants. What a great success!
This contest was set-up differently from the last with entrants asked to answer three multiple choice answers about online financing. This offers great research to generate future content. I cannot wait to see what people say as the number one reason why they would use online financing, and the number one reason they would not use online financing (if applicable).
If someone asked me if I would recommend the Wildfire Interactive service, I would have to confidently say yes. The process was easy, and the results are there. Now all I have to do is keep it going by tweeting, posting more articles, etc.
I'll keep you updated.
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
According to the Expert...
My colleague has given me some pearls of wisdom when handling contests in the social media realm that I wish to share with my followers. Some I have already known/done, but let's go over them here.
Lesson #1: Use hash tags when you tweet about your contest on Twitter
Lesson #1: Use hash tags when you tweet about your contest on Twitter
- Popular ones are: #win, #contest, #sweepstake, #cheaptweet, #coupon, #free, #promotion, or #giveaway
- What are hash tags? The search on Twitter is frustrating. For instance, it is nearly impossible to find a person unless you know their exact Twitter name, hash tags enable tweeters to find you based on a one-word search. And luckily, there are many people out there searching for contests.
- For our second contest, we are using this application; therefore I did not invest in it for our Twitter one. This could be worth the price tag if you need to spread the word. Also, I noticed when I go to the Promotions page on Facebook, individuals post on the wall their contests. This is completely free. It is debatable on how much traffic you will get, but every little bit helps.
- Here you tweet about your contest on their feed. The only issue is that everyone and their mom is tweeting on this platform about their contest. An enticing prize would come in handy here. Also, be aware that this tool works more for those that have a large number of fans-- it tweets it on their page (that is always changing), and on your Twitter page.
- In order to promote your contest, you have to do it everyday, and every couple of hours. Will it annoy your fan base? It may, but it may drive others to apply if you are consistent in your approach.
- The best way to promote your contest on other sites is to write a Press Release that has all the necessary links. Then submit this article to digg.com, reddit.com, etc.
- Don't be surprised if nothing happens with it, especially if you do not have a fan base. For me, three bloggers linked their blogs to my contest, which definitely helped with SEO. Hopefully, this happens with your contest.
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Today's News
Reaching out for help. Promoting is not easy when it comes to social media sites, and it does in fact take time. Today I have reached out to a fellow colleague to help spread the word about the contest. Social media cannot defeat me. This road has definitely provided some noticeable bumps along the way.
And it has barely been over a week! I cannot wait to hear what suggestions she has. And I will keep you guys tuned in as well.
We all want to learn the secrets of social media, especially me. And preferably, before I kill my Twitter and Facebook account.
Must.stay.optmistic.
And it has barely been over a week! I cannot wait to hear what suggestions she has. And I will keep you guys tuned in as well.
We all want to learn the secrets of social media, especially me. And preferably, before I kill my Twitter and Facebook account.
Must.stay.optmistic.
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
What's Going On
So it is now week 2 of our Twitter contest, and I'm feeling hopeful. I conversed with one man on Hubpages about how there is too much clutter on Twitter to advertise in that realm. Ironic that here I am trying to advertise in a field where I'm getting bombarded with advertising. I have implemented many tactics to get the contest page out, and have had many successes in getting others to advertise for me as well.
Unfortunately, the Internet is noisy. I continue to trek through, but one thing I have definitely noticed about social media, persistence is a must. I am taking the time to interact with individuals on a personal level, which I know will pan out to benefit me in the end. As of now, I continue to talk, something I was luckily gifted with since birth.
Unfortunately, the Internet is noisy. I continue to trek through, but one thing I have definitely noticed about social media, persistence is a must. I am taking the time to interact with individuals on a personal level, which I know will pan out to benefit me in the end. As of now, I continue to talk, something I was luckily gifted with since birth.
Monday, August 23, 2010
Promoting-- How to Spread the Word
Social media does not allow for much promoting; if you get caught, bloggers will ramp you with vicious comments protecting their "no-advertising" forums. As though, a "no-promotion-world" exists on the Internet. Being clever and sneaky is important in promotion, especially in regards to social media. I have gathered a list of ways to do just that, but be cautious, it could always backfire.
1) Pay bloggers to mention your product.
2) Develop different avatars for blogsites that talk about other related products with some mentioning of your own product mixed in (but not too much promotion to seem fishy).
3) Be real. Hire an employee to do the interaction, but say what company they work for upfront. This person will not promote, but rather interact.
4) Use online tools to gather fake accounts to make it seem like your fan page and/or twitter account has more followers and fans than actuality.
These were the suggestions given to me before I started my social media adventure. And for the past few weeks, I can give you better advice on what are the cons of each.
1) Paying bloggers means money spent on advertising that to many is defined as "fading." A blog post, tweet, and status update shifts down until it is completely gone from the main page after a newer post, tweet, or update takes its place. So you have to ask yourself is it really worth paying?
3) This is the method I decided to undertake as my social media strategy. The reason? I tried #2 and received a couple of backlash from online social media sites that did not like that approach. Quickly, I was told that I was spamming and overstepping my boundaries. The community reached out and halted my efforts. So instead, of being something I am not, I put up my photo, used my first name, and forewarned everyone I worked for a car financing company. Everything I write deals with a little bit of me, my company, and my experience. Since I have developed this approach, I have interacted with many individuals who have given me positive feedback for my knowledge; plus no more angry comments, but honest ones.
1) Pay bloggers to mention your product.
2) Develop different avatars for blogsites that talk about other related products with some mentioning of your own product mixed in (but not too much promotion to seem fishy).
3) Be real. Hire an employee to do the interaction, but say what company they work for upfront. This person will not promote, but rather interact.
4) Use online tools to gather fake accounts to make it seem like your fan page and/or twitter account has more followers and fans than actuality.
These were the suggestions given to me before I started my social media adventure. And for the past few weeks, I can give you better advice on what are the cons of each.
1) Paying bloggers means money spent on advertising that to many is defined as "fading." A blog post, tweet, and status update shifts down until it is completely gone from the main page after a newer post, tweet, or update takes its place. So you have to ask yourself is it really worth paying?
- An exception to this rule is a trade-off. If you find a blog that fits your product to a T, you may be able to offer something worthy to the blogger that will entice him or her to write about your product. Many bloggers, just like you, are looking for traffic. Therefore the typical trade-offs are a link on your website and/or writing you a blog that will post on your website with a link back to their blog. If you have an area for "related links," it is definitely ideal to reach out to others. The only downside is driving traffic to their website and away from yours. Then again, if you have something interesting to offer the reader, they will most likely not leave.
3) This is the method I decided to undertake as my social media strategy. The reason? I tried #2 and received a couple of backlash from online social media sites that did not like that approach. Quickly, I was told that I was spamming and overstepping my boundaries. The community reached out and halted my efforts. So instead, of being something I am not, I put up my photo, used my first name, and forewarned everyone I worked for a car financing company. Everything I write deals with a little bit of me, my company, and my experience. Since I have developed this approach, I have interacted with many individuals who have given me positive feedback for my knowledge; plus no more angry comments, but honest ones.
- The negative side of putting yourself out there is, of course, it stings that much harder when someone takes a hit at you. Plus, I'm a writer at heart, and my company obviously limits some of what I have to say. It can be quite challenging to be yourself, but mind the company regulations as well. My company has been very supportive of my efforts, but will yours be?
- Many people believe that there are many "fake" profiles out there, therefore just befriending them may not help as much as you hoped. The best advice is to reach out to them, make them read a comment from you that is genuine and human (no bots here). This will most likely lead to reciprocation.
Friday, August 20, 2010
Our Very First Contest
For the company I work for, CarFinance.com, we wanted to run a contest to build up fans, followers, and application submissions at a faster rate. From all my research, contests are very popular on the social realm. In fact, if you just retweet or post a contest you can receive a lot of traffic; meaning, you do not spend a dime, but get some much needed attention. That is a great idea for some who are looking to save money when it comes to social media.
Our first contest's goal was to build up the number of Twitter followers. I was prewarned before this contest that you should never measure success on social media through number of followers, fans, likes, etc. Instead the focus should be on how much exposure or money social media is generating. Since this was our first contest, I decided to overlook this fact and worry about getting followers.
To prepare for the contest, I wrote my guidelines (to be featured on our website), created a graphic element (like an advertisement to put on photo-centric sites like Flickr), and wrote any copy I would need to complete the task, such as standard emails. I had everything ready to go.
In regards to the prize, instead of the traditional raffle of a large prize where only one person wins, I decided to do smaller prizes and award everyone. 99 cent music downloads sounded like a great idea! Everyone loves music from hip hop to country to classic rock. Amazon.com was a great source to purchase 99 cent gift cards (they allow you to email gift cards and write in your amount).
In order for a person to receive a prize, he or she must follow CarFinanceCom on Twitter. After that, he or she will tweet @CarFinanceCom with a one word description of their last car buying experience-- this part of the contest was my favorite part. It may be the writer in me, but hearing what creative and imaginative language people would come up with tickled my curiosity.
Our contest started on the 16th of August, and unfortunately is not gaining the support I had hoped. We have two more weeks, and I am still working on countless ways to promote the contest. Hopefully, it will get people going, and excited to participate.
Our first contest's goal was to build up the number of Twitter followers. I was prewarned before this contest that you should never measure success on social media through number of followers, fans, likes, etc. Instead the focus should be on how much exposure or money social media is generating. Since this was our first contest, I decided to overlook this fact and worry about getting followers.
To prepare for the contest, I wrote my guidelines (to be featured on our website), created a graphic element (like an advertisement to put on photo-centric sites like Flickr), and wrote any copy I would need to complete the task, such as standard emails. I had everything ready to go.
In regards to the prize, instead of the traditional raffle of a large prize where only one person wins, I decided to do smaller prizes and award everyone. 99 cent music downloads sounded like a great idea! Everyone loves music from hip hop to country to classic rock. Amazon.com was a great source to purchase 99 cent gift cards (they allow you to email gift cards and write in your amount).
In order for a person to receive a prize, he or she must follow CarFinanceCom on Twitter. After that, he or she will tweet @CarFinanceCom with a one word description of their last car buying experience-- this part of the contest was my favorite part. It may be the writer in me, but hearing what creative and imaginative language people would come up with tickled my curiosity.
Our contest started on the 16th of August, and unfortunately is not gaining the support I had hoped. We have two more weeks, and I am still working on countless ways to promote the contest. Hopefully, it will get people going, and excited to participate.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Third Step, Interaction (EK!)
What to say? What to say?
Sometimes social media can make us speechless or want to go out and stage funny events to update our statuses. I have been guilty of doing both. Not really staging, but throwing old events like they just happened. It can be quite tedious to come up with updates, especially ones that draw attention. I am a huge fan of the "I Hate Mundane Facebook Updates," so I try to avoid them at all costs. Make things interesting. Here are some tips:
1) Retweet something interesting; just because someone already said it, does not mean you can't.
2) Post a link. You can pick a range, from news to humor, links are endless. Use digg.com or reddit.com to see what is hot right now.
3) Quote something. Quoting helps relieve the pressure of coming up with something smart to say. There are a ton of quotes out there as well as songs. Look around for inspiration.
4) Go with what you know best. Educating people on a certain subject matter that you are knowledeable is best. Expert opinions are valued highly.
Once you have an idea on how you plan to interact, dive in! If you make a misstep, you can always apologize. Within the first hour, I had to apologize to some bloggers for sounding to spam-like on their website. Another tip: Don't sound spam-like. But if you do, apologize and move on. Surprisingly, my apology gained 25 hits that week from one social media site. Sometimes controversy always works, huh?
Sometimes social media can make us speechless or want to go out and stage funny events to update our statuses. I have been guilty of doing both. Not really staging, but throwing old events like they just happened. It can be quite tedious to come up with updates, especially ones that draw attention. I am a huge fan of the "I Hate Mundane Facebook Updates," so I try to avoid them at all costs. Make things interesting. Here are some tips:
1) Retweet something interesting; just because someone already said it, does not mean you can't.
2) Post a link. You can pick a range, from news to humor, links are endless. Use digg.com or reddit.com to see what is hot right now.
3) Quote something. Quoting helps relieve the pressure of coming up with something smart to say. There are a ton of quotes out there as well as songs. Look around for inspiration.
4) Go with what you know best. Educating people on a certain subject matter that you are knowledeable is best. Expert opinions are valued highly.
Once you have an idea on how you plan to interact, dive in! If you make a misstep, you can always apologize. Within the first hour, I had to apologize to some bloggers for sounding to spam-like on their website. Another tip: Don't sound spam-like. But if you do, apologize and move on. Surprisingly, my apology gained 25 hits that week from one social media site. Sometimes controversy always works, huh?
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Second Step, Profile
Your profile- a great way to promote your brand and show people who you are. There is a lot that goes into your social media profiles on different websites. For our company, I hired a professional that designed the Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter layouts. This graphic designer matched our website feel and look. When it comes to social media sites, consistency is a must. You want people to realize where they are and with whom they are interacting with. If you consistently change up your themes, this will inevitably confuse the reader. This, of course, applies for smaller brands, not corporated ones that already have a strong brand recognition in their fans.
Profiles of a company should be humanized on social media sites. Many times, large corporate companies, will add the face of one of their employees to create this face-to-face interaction necessary to run social media campaigns successful. For my company, CarFinance.com, my photo, language, and comments are visible to other readers. Instead of not knowing who to talk to, they now have a point of reference. This works especially well for smaller companies. From studies it has shown that most individuals do not trust companies, make a company a person, and you will definitely have a more positive response.
Just like Joel Comm recommended, profiles finished first then starts the interaction.
Profiles of a company should be humanized on social media sites. Many times, large corporate companies, will add the face of one of their employees to create this face-to-face interaction necessary to run social media campaigns successful. For my company, CarFinance.com, my photo, language, and comments are visible to other readers. Instead of not knowing who to talk to, they now have a point of reference. This works especially well for smaller companies. From studies it has shown that most individuals do not trust companies, make a company a person, and you will definitely have a more positive response.
Just like Joel Comm recommended, profiles finished first then starts the interaction.
Friday, August 13, 2010
First step, RESEARCH
I didn't jump into the social media world blindly, I did some much needed reading. "Twitter Power 2.0," "Crush It!", and "Trusting Agents" are great books I can recommend. But be advised, much of what you learn on social media is not always in the books. For instance, "How do you respond if someone says something harshly about you?" "How do you respond if someone says something harshly about YOUR COMPANY?" "What do you do when your information gets marked as spam, but you are just trying to get your brand name out there?" Books won't help you deal with individual cases, but experience will.
Why I Think I Can Handle It
Since freshmen year in college, I have had a Facebook page (6 years ago and sadly, climbing). That was the only criteria I could manage to come up with that qualified me for the position. I definitely grew up alongside baby social media from Hotmail, AIM, Wikipedia.org, Myspace, Facebook, YouTube, and now Twitter. And honestly, I was ready to try something new and challenging. To study an art form that is brand new to most, and terrifying to others.
Thursday, August 12, 2010
How It Started
A couple months back, between a time of sending out resumes to a time of "screw it, let's go travel the world and spend every last cent in my savings," I got a job at CarFinance.com-- a company that specializes in giving out online auto loans. I interviewed for a copywriter position, and successfully landed the gige. For months, everyday, I would produce articles to be featured on the website (there was even a time when I could produce fifteen articles a day with a severe migraine to reward me for my feat). Two hundred and fifty articles later, I scored the social media position. That was a little bit over a month ago. And this is where I start my journey of collecting and maintaining fans, followers, and friends.
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