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Archive for the ‘Tips’ Category

MyMediaInfo’s Top 10s - Top 10 Twitter Moms

Friday, August 20th, 2010

Women, especially mothers, on social media make up one of the most powerful communities in the present age of information. They have very successful blogs, are active on Twitter, and lead discussions on most all products related to women, children, motherhood, medicine and health, and much more!

MyMediaInfo brings you a list of the top 10 Women tweeting about womanhood, motherhood, child-rearing, and related topics**. We have come up with the list through a unique rating method that takes into consideration the number of followers, tweets, overall popularity (retweets, lists etc.), relevance to the topic etc. Using these parameters and more, MyMediaInfo assigns a Score. An MMI Score of 1 is the highest possible. Furthermore, based on the MMI Score, a rating engine based on a 5 Star Rating System awards each Twitter handle a certain number of stars. Twitter handles with 5 stars are considered the most active, most influential in social media, and most relevant to their topics, in the MyMediaInfo database. Incidentally, the 5 Star Rating System is a new feature that has been released in the first week of August.

So, without further ado, here is the list of the Top 10 Twitter Moms

1. @phdinparenting – She is a mother of two children – a 6 year old and a 3 year old – and hence the PhD in parenting! @phdinparenting has an MMI score of 314, with 26,010* followers and 30,118 tweets at the time of writing this article. She tweets about her exploration of the art and science of parenting. In her twitter feed you will find humorous updates on her daily life, insights into parenting, discussions about products for children, and more. PhD In Parenting blogs at www.phdinparenting.com.

2. @CarissaRogers – She calls herself a ‘MOM of all trades”, and tweets about recipes, blogging tips, parenting fun, and about the store she is opening in August of 2010. Carissa Rogers has more than 36,158 tweets and 8,785 followers and is second on the top 10. Her blog posts on www.goodncrazy.com infuse humor with timely advice on things are varied as motherhood and photography!

3. @typeamom – This is Kelby Carr who has an MMI score of 355. To her 23,584 followers, she introduces herself as “Mom 2.0 empire builder, pioneer of social mom blog, influencer, speaker, Mom Blog SEO author, [and] social media consultant”. She has her own website - kelbycarr.com – where she talks about all things blogging, and about the Type-A Mom Conference, of which she is the founder and hostess. She also blogs at typeamomconference.com.

4. @bitofmomsenseRebecca S from Ottawa Canada has 4,132 followers and 32,209 tweets to her credit, and has an MMI score of 421. Her twitter posts are full of interesting interactions with other moms on the twitter sphere on anything from food to the latest version of MS Office. Her insights into technology, cooking, shopping, travel, and caring for young children, fill up her blog posts on abitofmomsense.com.

5. @BOREDmommy – Coming in fifth on this list, Maria, a.k.a BOREDmommy is, as she says, is still trying to be the perfect mom. Nevertheless, her 29,039 tweets on her adventures with parenting (and related topics) have earned her 4,364 followers and an MMI score of 517. She blogs at mommymaria.wordpress.com, where she talks about humorous incidents from her childhood, and her love for shopping, books, and her kids.

6. @KatjaPresnalKatja Presnal is the owner of SkimbacoLifestyle.com & SkimbacoHome.com. An Interior Design editor at LifetimeMoms.com, New Yorker, mom, wife, and avid skier, she tweets about everything related with her business and related activities, and throws in some of her personal experience as a mother. Her personal pages are an informative log on SkimbacoLifestyle and her work as a Community Manager for Collective Bias. She has 18,660 people regularly following her 22,640 and more tweets, and an MMI score of 525.

7. @CrunchyGoddessAmy Gates is a mom of two, and passionate about home birth, green living, environmentalism, and Attachment Parenting. She plans to change the world, “one blog post at a time”! She has 6,823 followers who get a peek into her mind and life through her 25,671 tweets. They can also meet her at crunchydomesticgoddess.com, and at BlogHer, where she is a contributing writer. She is the owner of Attached at the Hip and Cute as a Bug – two online shops that sell clothing and products for moms and kids. Amy Gates has an MMI score of 577.

8. @Freebies4MomHeather is a mom and blogger, regularly updating the latest and hottest freebies for mothers on her blog Freebies4Mom.com. Her aim is to help moms save money through coupons, giveaways, sweepstakes, money-saving tips and more. Heather has 46,433 followers, and has tweeted 9,383 times, giving her an MMI score of 599.

9. @ModernMomModernMom.com is a magazine and community for women and moms. The tweets (all 7,465 of them) are about Celebrity parents, and delicious treats for little children and adults alike, and any current events going viral on social media. The community of ModernMom.com was co-founded by Brooke Burke and Lisa Rosenblatt. With 49,222 followers, @modernmom has an MMI score of 643.

10. @alizasherman – A successful businesswoman and the Original Cybergrrl, Aliza Sherman is a social media innovator and commentor. She talks about social media, entrepreneurship, marketing, and traveling on Twitter and in her blog alizasherman.wordpress.com. She is considered by many as a Thought Leader on social media. She also blogs at WorkItMom as Entrepreneur Mom. Aliza Sherman has 7,902 followers and has tweeted22,219 times, giving her an MMI score of 713.

* All number of tweets and followers are based on facts collected while the article was written.

**To recreate this list: If you are a customer of MyMediaInfo, and have access to the social media module of the database, then you can recreate this list using some easy steps.

1. Click on the Social Media Module, and then select ‘Twitter’ from the categories below the search field.

2. Now enter the keyword search “mom OR mommy OR mother”, and you will get the entire list of Twitter handles related with this search term.

3. Now, double click on the column called “MMI Score”, and the list will rearrange in ascending order. Remember, the smaller the MMI score number, the more influential the Twitter handle.

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This article first appeared in the August 2010 issue of MyMediaNotes (MyMediaInfo’s monthly newsletter), and debuted the MyMediaInfo Top 10s Contest.

10 Social Media Best Practices for PR Pros

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Social Media has become a trend that cannot be ignored anymore. More so if you have a growing business. Connecting with the public on Facebook, replying to customer concerns on Twitter, and promoting the product through a blog have all become default agendas in the marketing and sales strategies of companies during the last few years. The success of a few corporate giants in the social media forum has spurred on many to take the plunge. However, is everyone equally successful in social media. What are the winners doing right? What can we learn from them?

Here are some things that successful organizations on social media have always done:

1. Planning a Social Media Strategy: Before you take the plunge, ask yourself why you need to do this. What is your objective in forming a social media presence? What will be the purpose of your presence on social media? Do you have enough time to invest in this undertaking? Plan your approach according to your objective, and plan to be consistent in the forums. Be prepared to invest your time and resources in this undertaking.

2. Structure your Online Presence: Do you have accounts on every random social networking site you came across? Does your company profile on one site look different from another? Or is the image of your company or product consistent throughout the social media sphere? If you have two separate agendas for your online presence, keep them as distinct as possible. For instance, if you have one that is based on customer service, promotion and product related activities, and another for employees to socialize, ensure that the two are kept separate. This way people can choose which forum they want to be a part of, and your objective for each page will be understood easily. Also ensure that your profiles on social media networking sites are complete and give genuine information. This way, people know that they are dealing with a genuine company, and that their conversations will be taken seriously.

3. Conversation is Crucial: When we say ‘networking’, it means socializing and forming relationships. Therefore, it becomes essential for any company on social media to participate and listen to the customer or public on social media. As a company, you need to share interesting information and receive feedback from the public. Similarly, try to go to comment or reply to posts, so that people become aware of your presence. Instead of simply setting up an RSS feed for a blog, it would help you build a relationship if you read the post and comment on it.

4. Transparency: Be upfront about your objective for using the social media site. Avoid turning every conversation on social media into a promotional pitch. If you intend to make a pitch, make it clear to your followers or readers that it is the sole objective of that particular post.

5. Share Valuable Information: Make your presence on social media valuable to yourself and your readers or followers. Share information that would help others in making a decision or widening their horizons. Listen to useful information shared by others, be it industry or product related, and comment on it. Let your readers or followers know that you are as interested in what they have to say, as you are in saying your piece.

6. Mingle, Monitor and Manage: Social Media is an open forum, and it is the place where everyone is talking about your product or company. You need to be watching this space very closely. Devise a method through which you can monitor social media content about you. There are many successful media monitoring tools out there. Find yourself one that suits your specific needs. Listen to what people are saying about your company, product and brand image. Provide them with a forum to express their thoughts, interact with those who are sincere in their feedback, converse with the customer and reassure them of the quality of your product or service. Meet head-on the challenges and criticisms that rise on public forums in social media. All this will prove to your customers, readers and followers that you are serious about maintaining a good relationship with the society.

7. Consistency and Commitment: Be consistent in your conversations on social media, and maintain your brand image through out the internet. Be committed to the process of interacting and building relationships on the social media. Set aside the time and resources to carry out this task, as a half-hearted effort will be easily detected and people will react accordingly.

8. Track the Monetary Value: Being a corporate on social media, you cannot afford to ignore the monetary value of engaging in social networking online. As Chris Brogan says, in his interview with SAS’s Deb Orton, if you feel that your other marketing efforts are proving to be more successful already, you need to think twice about plunging into social media. On the other hand, if you need something to boost your marketing and PR campaigns, then social media could be the one thing that makes all the difference. In this video, Chris Brogan talks about this and other best practices for social media.

9. Be Interesting: There are a million interesting things you can do on social media that will increase your visibility and promote you in a positive way in public. Showcase your products, create interest in your events, crowd source your search for innovative ideas and offer exciting prizes for the best ideas. All this, and more, will ensure a place for your company or product in the memory of the public.

10. Courtesy pays: All the rules of living in a normal society apply on social media. When you make a mistake, apologize immediately and sincerely. People are willing to forgive more often than not! Return the kindness shown to you by others. Follow back those who follow you  (if they are not spammers!), promote another person’s blog and send some readership their way, link back to a Facebook post that you think is useful, comment positively on posts, respond immediately when a customer expresses discontent or concern. Courtesy never goes out of fashion.

These are just a few things that you could do to get the most out of your social media experience as a corporate and a brand. If there are more that you can think of, add them to the pool in the comments!

Earth Day - To Pitch or Not to Pitch!

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Earth Day is 40 years old on 22 April 2010. Millions of people are coming together to do their part to save Planet Earth. Everyone, but everyone, has their theory on how to celebrate Earth Day! People are planning rallies, hosting carnivals, festivals and fashion shows, and killing energy bills (!)…no, wait… that can’t be good!

Of course, there is no need to ask, “What will you be doing to celebrate Earth day?” As a good corporate role model, I’m sure you have some eco-friendly activity planned. On the other hand, what I will ask you is, “What do you think of commercializing Earth Day?”

Everybody’s doing it! Take, for instance, James Cameroon, the man who popularized blue body paint a second time, after Mel Gibson! The director of Avatar has planned the release of the movie in DVDs to coincide with the Earth Day! Can you see the irony in The Center for Biological Diversity giving away free condoms even though latex is not bio-degradable! The powers that be join in, with a move to cut back on fossil fuels, strategically coinciding with Earth Day.

Where does corporate social responsibility end, and where does it start being all about the corporate? We have commercialized just about everything on the planet, from love to religion, to childhood. Our greed for more and disrespect for the planet is what has brought about the necessity for an Earth Day. Will we drive the final nail in the coffin and commercialize Earth Day too?

Laurie Essig of True/Slant takes a bold stand, condoning all those who have commercialized Earth Day into just another vehicle to sell their products. ‘Going Green’ is looked at as just another stunt to hog the limelight for that few moments of fame, and celebrities are the biggest offenders, according to Psychology Today. Simply wrapping your product in a veneer of so-called environmentalism does not mean that you have done your part to save the earth! The New York Times regrets that Earth Day has simply become a big business.

We implore you to ask yourself this: Does Earth Day matter anymore? Can we do something really meaningful to save the planet? Or will Earth Day simply be another Hallmark moment?

Post-Recession: Effective PR Tools in a Recovering Economy

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

recovery1The great recession has come and gone, leaving unemployment, stock market crashes, mountainous losses, and inflation in its wake. Nevertheless, according to an article in Monsters&Critics.com published on 2 December 2009, the Federal Reserve has released a survey which claims that “most parts of the United States have witnessed some improvement in their economies over the last months”.

Although the rest of the economy is still in the process of picking itself up and dusting off the effects of the recession, the PR industry has proved to be pretty resilient throughout the whole ordeal. IsleNews.com carries an article to this effect. Some 2000 Chartered Institute of Public Relations members were surveyed, and the following results were found:

- Many areas of the PR industry have expanded in spite of the recession, with the digital PR sector seeing the greatest growth.

- Around 33% of the consultants have been successful in retaining more than 10 regular clients, and some 60% have added between two and five clients.

- The budgets for Communication in most PR firms have remained stable through the recession.

That the PR industry has emerged relatively unscathed is obvious from the survey. Now that growth is imminent in the global economy, there is more scope for innovation and value-adding techniques that could take your PR company to greater heights. When a PR company is seen as evolving, adapting and innovating in spite of an economy in rebound, the faith of the stakeholders and the public is strengthened.

To keep this confidence alive, a PR company should look for the best PR strategies on offer. Press releases and editorial opportunities take on monumental importance. At the same time, one cannot help but give prime importance to online PR solutions like media and editorial calendar databases, and the all-pervasive social media.

One such source of ideal PR campaign solutions is the MyMediaInfo Media Database. MyMediaInfo already has close to 300,000 editorial opportunities for the year 2010 alone. The database also has close to 200,000 editorial contacts. The resilience mymediainfo-official-logoof the PR industry has spurred us on to refine the media database further to include the Twitter handles and feeds of journalists, enhancements in the profiles and addition of images, and refinements in the Google-like search of the tool. Search suggestions are just one of the additions made to the search feature of the database. Customization options in saved lists and drafts of press releases that have been distributed are some of the new features added to the Autumn release of MyMediaInfo.

With the promise of the ideal PR solution for an exciting campaign, your booming PR practice will more than surpass the recovering economy in flying colors.

7 Tips to Pitch Mommy Bloggers

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

“They influence over 85% of all consumer purchases in the USA, and wield $5 trillion in purchasing power”. Of the 42 million women involved in social media weekly, they form a hefty 11.5 million who are very active in the blogosphere.* They have their very own ’sphere’ in the said blogosphere. They can build or break a product with one post. They are passionate yet kind, and are becoming a successful social media and PR phenomenon, all on their own right!

They are Mommy Bloggers - the women who say that their life is actually just a mixture of potty training, runny noses, PTA meetings, and week-old laundry, with the odd vacation. They have kids, and adorable rambunctious ones at that, and large families, stacks of bills, dentists appointments, and barbecue weekends in tees and shorts just like the rest of us.

But if you are in PR, you better sit up and take notice of them! Here’s why:

1. Mommy bloggers have emerged as a hugely trusted source of product reviews. They are known for their candid estimation of all issues, and this is evident in the product reviews they do. This is because they only review a product they need and have used. They almost never promote a product which they would not want to use. So, if your product has quality, they will definitely acknowledge it.

2. Mommy bloggers throng to the blogosphere to talk to someone who gets them. They are a strong network that is growing by the minute. Just look at BlogHer! And they are fiercely loyal and protective of their kind. Therefore, they are also loyal followers of other mommy bloggers, and will bookmark a mommy blog quicker than they would a techie blog, anyday. So, if you want to be seen, a mommy blog would be the place to be.

3. A Mommy blog talks about more things than any other kind of blog. They have got discussions on school, education, gardening, food, technology, baby products, kitchen gadgets, home-safety, automobiles, politics, environment, fashion…You name it, they got it! So, they are as relevant as a target audience can get!

4. Moms decide on all shopping, everything from the grocery list to Christmas shopping, and where the family goes for vacation! When they are looking to buy, are they looking at your product?

Who better to give you some PR love than a Mommy blogger?

However, these are mothers, so you better play by the rules!

1. Form a relationship first: Get to know the blogger’s interests, what they like to write about, and things that are important to them. Pitch them only if you think your product is something they would use.

2. Don’t assume they want your freebies: Blogging as a mother is not easy, and for some it is their job. Which means that, one, be ready to pay them for their efforts on your behalf. And, two, never assume that they need your products, and will blog about them regardless of quality.

3. Remember they are mothers, first: Never expect them to drop everything for a conference call with you, or take that vacation you are offering. Try to understand that blogging takes second place to family and hungry kids, but it does not mean that they will not take your product seriously.

4. Don’t tell them what to write: Not if you want them to be objective about your product. Try not to bog them down with your opinions on how a certain product should be promoted. Reserve that for your advertising company.

5. Tell them who else is involved: When you tell them about other mothers who are blogging on your behalf, it becomes easier to form a network that will loyally stand up for your product. Moms will also tell you of other mommy bloggers whom you could pitch.

6. Be respectful and friendly: Mothers will not take sassiness from their kids, or from any other human being, for that matter! Politeness and friendliness is as important as the quality of your product.

7. There are laws to follow now: The Federal Trade Commission has published Final Guides governing Endorsements and Testimonials, which apply to bloggers too. Mommy blogger will follow it to the ‘t’, so try to be aware of what that means to your campaign.

If both sides play by the rules, this could be a win-win situation for all members involved.

So, have you pitched to a Mommy Blogger yet?

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*Source: Pitching Mommy Bloggers: Top Women Online Influencers Reveal Best PR Pitches and Strategies. www.reuters.com.