Category

sales & marketing

It’s All About You.com

Jeremy Schoemaker. Gary Vaynerchuk. Zac Johnson. All names you know or should know if you read this blog. But have you ever thought about why? The reason you know their names is that these marketing mavens have taken the time to build and maintain a personal brand. You know them because they want you to know them. They work at it. They invest in it. They view building their personal brand as an integral part of their business endeavors.

93074670_525de01e09Personal brands are powerful. In many ways they can be more valuable than a product, service or corporate brand. Want to sell more wares? Slap Trump’s name on a building, have Britney Spears front a perfume… or leverage the Shoemoney name to sell a set of Internet Tools. People identify with people. Marketable people with solid personal brands can sell almost any product.

I believe every affiliate marketer should invest time and money creating his or her personal brand. Whether you are working for yourself or an employer a personal brand can be an incredible long term asset that can open doors and create wealth. You aren’t going to be a rockstar overnight, but if you start now you can build over time.

Ted’s Tips For Starting a Personal Brand

Define Your Brand Promise
What are you all about? What are your interests? What are you good at? Successful branding is about promoting your natural strengths, whatever those may be. If you are a geek be a super geek. If you are good looking show off that pretty mug of yours. List out your assets and determine what will appeal most to your audience. Create a simple statement that defines your brand promise. A sample promise might read “Creative disruption of the marketing industry with a smile”.

Own Your Name
If you don’t already have your own personal domain go out and get one. Your domain should either be based on your real name or on a persona you plan to go by. Any persona you create should complement your brand promise. Whatever domain you choose you should try to lockup the name throughout the socialsphere. Don’t be @johndoe on twitter and have the domain technojohn.com. Try to be consistent whenever you can to avoid confusion.

sitelogo1Make Your Mark
Every notable brand has a distinct logo mark, color palette, font and style. If you are not a designer don’t try to create these elements of your personal brand on your own. Just because you have Photoshop doesn’t mean you should be designing your website or business cards. Hire a real designer with experience in branding. Share your brand promise and collaborate to create a professional graphic identity you like.

Share and Promote
Your new domain should serve as the hub for all things you. Update your content on a regular basis and use social media tools to start spreading the word. If you really want to grow you are going to need to invest some cash or other currency. Consider having custom swag made, attending industry events, and buying ads to get your name out as much as possible. If you want to be perceived as a rockstar you have to promote like a rockstar.

line

feedfront

I wrote the above article I for last month’s FeedFront Magazine. You can download the entire magazine free. Special thanks to Missy Ward and Shawn Collins for the opportunity to contribute.

Microsoft Photomagic

Can you spot the difference between these two Microsoft sites? Sure, one is from Poland and one is from the US but if you look closer you will notice something else that is different. If you are having a problem figuring it out then open both sites up in two tabs.

picture-82picture-83

First rule of Photoshop : don’t get caught changing out peoples heads. Props to Matthew Schultz for pointing this out.

Paparazzi for MacOSX

paparazziHave you ever needed to take a screen shot of a realllllly long web page? I have to all the time. In the past I used to take pictures of sections then piece them back together in Photoshop. It was a pain in the arse. That was until Veronique told me about Paparazzi. It is a simple yet incredibly powerful little app that takes great looking screen shots of full websites. You can set the capture sizes and output, even create a batch of sites that you want to image. It has already save me a solid hour this week. (5/5 Tongues)

Download it here for free

nyt

Sponsored Tweets are Nothing New

I thought I would make a quick point about sponsored tweets given all the discussion going on. Direct and indirect monetization of Twitter is nothing new.

My buddy Mike over at TechCrunch has been doing sponsored tweets for some time. I think TechCrunch actually helped pioneer sponsored tweets.

twitter-_-michael-arrington_-thank-you-techcrunch-spons

The only difference is that TC is pointing you back to a sponsored blog post, which also happens to be surrounded by tons of ads that advertisers pay for on a CPM basis. The more people that click on the link above the more money TC makes.

thank-you-techcrunch-sponsors

Not only is TC getting paid for the tweet, they are getting paid for the post and the display ads. In fact, every tweet that drives people back to TechCrunch.com is monetized. If that isn’t a sponsored tweet I don’t know what is. I commend TechCrunch. It is a smart business move for them to integrate all of their social media assets into their advertiser offering.

What we are doing is cutting out the middle step. Instead of pointing someone to a blog post, that then points them to a sponsor we are simply pointing to the sponsor.

sponsored_tweets

Either way it is sponsored, our method just generates better results for the advertiser because it is directly sponsored. It’s more efficient, you don’t lose anyone in the pass through.

Let’s Talk Sponsored Tweets

I had a discussion with Brian Morrissey of AdWeek yesterday about the upcoming launch of Sponsored Tweets. To be honest I didn’t expect a story to be published just a few hours later. The site is still in development and not available to the public. I didn’t share very much about the service and had nothing visually to show him in terms of how it would work. However, the blogosphere is abuzz this morning with many sites echoing the same story. You can check out some coverage here:

AdWeek
Mashable
ReadWriteWeb

Do we plan on launching a solution that allows people to monetize their twitter influence? Yes. Are we trying to do so in a way that provides disclosure, autheticity, freedom of voice, ROI for advertisers and some level of moderation? Yes. It’s not an easy thing to do, but we have been playing around with Twitter publisher monetization models for some time now. The goal is to best serve tweeters, advertisers and readers.

I have always been open to discussion on any topic. There is more than one way to approach this and I am all ears. If anyone wants to do an interview, podcast or just talk shop drop me a line at ted@izea.com and we will schedule something soon.

Using Keynote for Video

Most people think of Apple’s Keynote as a PowerPoint replacement for making presentations. While it does kick the crap of PowerPoint as presentation software it also doubles as great video creation software. You may remember the sponsored conversation video I posted a few weeks ago. Guess what? The entire thing was put together in Keynote. The assets were created in Photoshop and Illustrator then composed and animated in Keynote (in HD no less).

Apple Keynote

The built-in text and image transitions in Keynote make it a breeze to put together great looking videos. I hired Chris Davies at ProVoiceUSA.com for $125.00 (a hell of a deal) to do a professional vocieover for the presentation, then exported it as HD video using the share feature. If you need to produce educational videos fast and on the cheap you might want to check out Keynote and give Chris a call.

picture-3

Product Placement Recon Mission

McDonalds product placement on the news desk

McDonalds product placement on the news desk

I am working on a big presentation about product placement and I need some help. I want to gather the biggest body of examples I can get my hands on. I am specifically looking for television and movies, but I would love to get some other examples as well (video games, theme park attractions, fast food). Anything where advertising is integrated into the content or experience is of interest. If you have your movies or television shows digitized I would love to get my hands on full quality stills (640px or greater) of the following:

  1. Taco Bell in Demolition Man
  2. Apple Computer in Mission:Impossible
  3. Dodge in Twister
  4. FedEx in Cast Away
  5. Subway in Happy Gilmore
  6. Pepsi in Back to the Future
  7. Coke in Blade Runner
  8. McDonalds in the Fifth Element
  9. Coke in American Idol
  10. Ford in American Idol
  11. Staples in The Office
  12. Ford in Knight Rider
  13. Mr. Potato Head in Toy Story
  14. Red Strip in The Firm
  15. Crest Vanilla Toothpaste in The Apprentice
  16. Lark Cigarettes in James Bond License to Kill
  17. Audi in iRobot
  18. Gap in Minority Report
  19. Blackberry in Sex in the City
  20. Snapple in Seinfeld

I will do a follow up post on this an provide links back to everyone who helps on the project. Please point me to your stills in the comments.

An Open Letter To Matt Cutts

Matt,
First I want to point out that we have a strict no-follow policy for all links we provide through SocialSpark.

http://socialspark.com/code_of_ethics

If there were any no-follow violations on the Kmart campaign I can assure you they were unintentional. These six posts were done manually outside of SocialSpark but adhered to the same code of ethics. The only reason any of those posts may have had PR passing links is the blogger added them on their own accord without any instruction whatsoever. The only link provided to the bloggers was a DART link that does not pass PR. This clearly was not about SEO, if it was we would have told the bloggers where to link to and what anchor tag to use.

In retrospect we should have forced every single link to be no-follow, regardless of destination and we will do that in the future. We will do this not because I believe in the concept of no-follow, we will do this because bloggers fear Google.

I still believe the concept of no-follow is absolutely ridiculous. There is NO WAY Google can possibly determine paid links from unpaid links, even if you could where does it stop? I work for IZEA, they pay my salary. I link back to them solely because they are my employer. Should that be no-followed? What about parent companies linking to subsidiaries and brands? Vendors linking to clients? Bloggers who get “review units”, free trips, tickets, etc.

If you are going to try to enforce rules tied to “paid links” you need to look at the very fabric of all inks and the commercial relationship between sites….and guess what? You can’t.

Not only is no-follow a lost cause, it is also enforced sporadically and unevenly. When I mentioned TechCrunch using PR passing links to you (on several occasions) you reached out them personally, you didn’t penalize them. In your recent post you point out an article on RWW, a PR 8 site. Guess what? RWW passes PR on sponsored posts!!

the-services-that-power-readwriteweb-readwriteweb

What’s the solution? Should Google go slap RWW? NO. It’s a great site that simply linked off to some content that they felt was relevant, which is EXACTLY what the Kmart bloggers you called out in your post were doing. If you are going to slap the bloggers that participated with Kmart I expect to see the same applied to RRW- Publicly.

Don’t do it. It’s wrong. None of these sites should be penalized. These are all good bloggers trying to follow Googles rules.

Fix Your Algorithm & Take Responsibility

Here’s an idea. Instead of trying to enforce rules on bloggers and other publishers why don’t you fix your algorithm? Don’t blame the publishers. Don’t make publishers do things differently because your search engine needs help. Buck up and take responsibility, it is the ONLY way Google can win.

While IZEA has agreed to use no-follow it will never be used by the masses and you shouldn’t expect it to be.

Google Hates .me Domains

It’s been five months since I launched this blog and it is still nowhere to be found when you search for “ted murphy” on Google.com. Google’s algorithm gives so much weight to site age, back links and apparently domain extension that superior content and relevancy don’t seem to matter.

I have owned tedmurphy.org and tedmurphy.net for many years. While neither of them are regularly updated with original content anymore both of them outrank this site. My Vimeo, Twitter , LinkedIn and Facebook profiles also outrank Ted.me for my name. All of these social media profiles link back to this blog yet Google.com doesn’t seem to recognize it as an authority. Ted.me does not rank in the first 100 Google.com search results for “ted murphy”.

I started wondering if I was doing something wrong. Is this blog configured improperly in some way? Tedmurphy.org is a simple Tumblr blog, a platform that doesn’t have any of the SEO bells and whistles you can install with WordPress (I use the All in One SEO pack among others). I looked through Ted.me and didn’t see any glaring issues. The site is indexed just fine and I rank for terms I don’t care about.

The only thing I could come up with was my .me domain extension. I went to Google.me and sure enough ted.me is listed #5 (with tedmurphy.org outranking it).

Beware of .me Domains

I have to admit I had second thoughts about purchasing a .me domain. I was drawn to it because ted.me is so short and unique… it’s not often that you can grab a 5 letter domain. I knew international domains were penalized on Google.com but thought I could overcome it with good content that people linked to. It appears I may have been wrong.

Am I screwed? Will ted.me never reach the top of google.com for my name because of the .me extension? It sure looks like that may be the case. In my opinion Google hates .me domain extensions. While ted.me did show up on Google.me it was still outranked by my .net domain, which means even Google.me favors traditional U.S. domains like .com, .net and .org. Unless you want to rank for Google in Montenegro I would stay away from .me domains for now.

If any SEO experts can weigh in on their experience with .me domains I would greatly appreciate it.


Personal Branding Crisis

Last night I returned home from my day at Daytona with Blu Frog Energy to find my favorite hat destroyed by my dog Bonzo. She has grown quite spoiled now that I take her to work with me every day, and hates it when we leave her at home. We had a dog sitter pick her up in the afternoon, but apparently that wasn’t fast enough. She gnawed on my hat and on one of Tara’s dresses, making sure she sent a clear message to both of us. Don’t leave me alone. I don’t like it.

Brand Damage

Normally I wouldn’t care so much. Stuff is stuff and I can buy another hat. The problem is this particular hat has become part of my personal brand. I have similar hats, but none of them are as identifiable as that one. That hat is featured in hundreds of photos of me, including the logo on this very blog. People recognize me because of that hat, it has become part of my image.

The truth is I screwed up. I’ve made a huge mistake (Arrested Development reference). When I decided to include that hat in my logo I should have made sure I had enough backup hats to deal with misplacing one, destruction or simple wear and tear. I knew better, I just didn’t think about it until it was too late. I tried to buy more about a month after I launched this site and had no luck.

It’s actually a good lesson for anyone developing a brand that includes a specific style of hat, glasses, etc. Make sure you have enough backups to last you several years, chances are you won’t be able to buy that same model or style again.

Help Me Rescue My Personal Brand

I bought the hat at Urban Outfitters in August. I have searched for the RN# featured in the picture below on their site and have come up with nothing. There is no website for the Vintage Crown Company. I have no idea where to get more of these hats.

Are you a super sleuth? If so you may score some cash. I am offering up a $100 reward to the first person who leaves a comment on this blog with either a link to buy this exact product or a phone number that I can call to order it. It must be this exact hat style, not a similar product. I will also hook you up with a thank you post and tweet for helping me out.

Brand Damage

Brand Damage

Brand Damage

Brand Damage

I hope one of you is better at tracking down things like this than I am. I really don’t want to go through a personal rebrand.