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Online Business Advice

Socialnomics Video (updated) - Interesting stats an updated version of the well-known video

Fergal Coleman - Tuesday, June 01, 2010
Some interesting and provocative stats. What we say to businesses however is that they to develop a strategy and a systematic approach to harness the power of social media.



Search Engine Optimisation: Why you should optimise

Fergal Coleman - Monday, May 31, 2010
Ask yourself this; in the last 2 months, privately or professionally, to research a product or service that you are interested in buying, have you:
  • answered a direct mail advertisement (3% of those asked answered yes)
  • gone to mainstream media (magazine, radio, television etc) (22% of those asked answered yes)
  • looked at print Yellow Pages? (3% of those asked answered yes)
  • gone to Google or another search engine? (100% of those asked answered yes. YES 100%!)
  • tapped your online social networks and received a website address that you have visited (80% od those asked answered yes)
Search Engines are clearly the primary means of getting found by potential customers.* And 85-90% of search engine visitors don't look past the first page of results. Isn’t it time you stopped reverting to the old traditional methods and seriously engage with a medium that delivers results?

*Social media is fast catching up. To read about social media click here

Optimisation Will Help You Generate More Business Online

Need more compelling reasons to conduct a Search Engine Optimization(SEO) project and to get your business ranking on the top of Google searches?
  • 93% of users worldwide use search engines to find websites (Forrester Research).
  • More than 92% of searchers never search for brand names (DoubleClick).
  • 85-90% of Google users don’t look past the first page of results.
  • 87% of people who are ready to buy use the normal (‘natural’ or ‘organic’) results, not the sponsored/paid listings.
  • 73% of global chief executives (CEOs, CIO's, etc.), say that they prefer to find out about new products online.
  • 100% of customers see the first, second and third results in an organic search. Whereas only 50% see the first result in the sponsored listings (PPC/paid ads). And only 40% see the second paid result, and 30% see the third.
So what are you waiting for??!
 

B2B - New Rules of Marketing - Keynote address

Fergal Coleman - Monday, May 17, 2010
The New Rules of Marketing and PR keynote presentation and Q&A session delivered by David Meerman Scott at the Business Marketing Association 2009 national “Unlearn” conference.

Thanks to Heidi Cool for directing me to this via LinkedinAnswers. And thanks to David for a great presentation!

Scott spoke June 10, 2009 at the sold-out conference held in Chicago’s Drake Hotel. Since the BMA is a business-to-business organization, Scott’s keynote is tailored to a B-to-B audience. Scott argues that when others spread your ideas and tell your stories online, buyers are eager to do business with you and all kinds of doors begin to open.

David Meerman Scott keynote at BMA 2009 national conference from David Meerman Scott on Vimeo.

Advice From Social Media Practitioners

Fergal Coleman - Friday, May 14, 2010
Advice From Some Leading American Social Media Practitioners

Some good tips in this Techcrunch video that ties in with what we preach at Bua Consulting. Start with the business, its strategy and objectives before you even think of the tools....



Online Business Video - Introduction to Bua's Philisophy and Approach

Fergal Coleman - Saturday, May 08, 2010
This short video introduction provides as overview of how Bua Consulting helps clients understand our strategy and our approach to adding value to business by the correct adoption of technology.


 

Online Business: Basic Business Rules Still Apply

Fergal Coleman - Tuesday, February 16, 2010

The extract below is from an excellent article by Ann O'Dea which was in the recent University College Dublin Business Connections magazine. This extract is from http://www.siliconrepublic.com/news/article/15074/special-events/basic-business-rules-still-apply

For clients wishing to read the full article please contact us and we will make our copy of the magazine available to you.

Readers in Ireland may be interested in attending the Digital Landscapes Conference in Dublin on 3 March 2010. For more visit www.ucd.ie/growingireland

Digital Landscapes: Basic business rules still apply

There can be no doubt that existing and emerging technologies can play a major role in business growth, but they are complementary rather than a replacement for sound business strategy and practice, says Prof Damien McLoughlin who chairs the Digital Landscapes conference in March.

Prof Damien McLoughlin of UCD School of Business will be chairing the Digital Landscapes event on March 3, and he cautions against losing perspective when tackling the seemingly complex world of new technologies and trends.

“The whole digital area is exciting and entertaining, probably in equal measure, but I think what is really important is to keep the excitement and entertainment in perspective,” he says. “I think it is changing the business environment in a very fundamental way, but it’s not changing everything, its not changing how we use core tools in management.”

That said, the new digital world has presented business with some fundamental challenges as well as positive changes, he says. “One key area is that it is absolutely impossible now for brands not to engage with the idea of integrity, so we continue to see all sorts of brands – Dove, Lynx, Coca-Cola, Nike, take your pick – being held to account by consumers who are dialoguing with each other about those brands.

“The big challenge for businesses as a result is how to engage in that dialogue. I think there are two ways of doing it. Firstly you have to participate, and secondly you can’t participate in a discussion where you have no credibility. That means that where brands have had practices that are not appropriate, or things they hoped in the past people wouldn’t find out, then they can’t engage honestly in that dialogue.

“That is something we have known for a while, but I think it will become even more widespread,” says McLoughlin. “The best example for me is the Dove Campaign for Real Beauty. I think it was very courageous by Unilever to get involved in that. It’s a superb campaign, and it spoke to a certain segment of women in a very positive way. As a father of two daughters, I appreciated the ‘Talk to your daughter before the beauty industry does’ message.

“However, today if you go onto YouTube and search for the Campaign for Real Beauty, you’ll find Unilever’s commercials, but you’ll also find a response by a guy called Rye Clifton, pointing out that, while Dove has put out this message about real beauty, the very same company uses a very, very different portrayal of women in their promotion of Lynx (Clifton ends his videos with the tagline ‘Talk to your daughters before Unilever does’). There is a contradiction there and Unilever needs to do something about that.

“Take another example. Innocent sold a part of its business to Coca-Cola recently, and the first thing that happened in a very, very public way was that customers of Innocent – not the shareholders, not the financiers, not the distributors, but the people who buy the product – called the company to account on a company blog where the founders of the company participate in a very real kind of way. I think that’s a good thing, and I think that is the future.”

A positive thing for business, says McLoughlin, is that this new type of dialogue imposes the need to learn new skills. “I’m thinking here about members of senior management whose assistant prints out emails for them to read at home in the evening, who own two mobile phones and that’s it. It’s very difficult for a person like that to appreciate things like Twitter, Facebook and so on. So that’s something businesses are going to have to grasp.”

Segmentation is key

The good news for sound businesses, says McLoughlin, is that many of the basic rules of business still apply. “Segmentation, the absolute core of marketing, and hence the core of growth strategies for businesses, is still as important now as it ever was.

“One of the perceptions is that more information means more power to customers, which means prices falling, but I think as the online phenomenon progresses we are actually seeing something of the opposite.

“We have a whole series of social networking sites – Bebo, Facebook etc – but those companies are not particularly profitable. One of the problems is you can have a Facebook page with your family, your friends and your business contacts on it. But do you necessarily want to have the conversations you have with your family online to be the conversations that you have with your business contacts? That for me is a challenge.”

McLoughlin points instead to LinkedIn’s business model. “What LinkedIn offers is a social networking site for people who wish to be connected to useful business contacts. And guess who out of these sites is making money? It’s LinkedIn. The reason for that is its segmentation strategy – it speaks to a particular need, which is to connect people to other business contacts.”

Ultimately, consumers will engage in, and pay for, what they perceive to be of value, says McLoughlin. He points to the newspaper industry, which is struggling with the online model and how to monetise their content. “Yet you look at the Financial Times, which has little trouble getting people to pay €250 a year for an online subscription. It’s seen as a business expense for an important service. I don’t think in a month of Sundays people will pay that for a generalist daily newspaper. So you’re back to effective segmentation.”

It comes down to looking at the information consumers have, identifying specific needs, and charging accordingly, says McLoughlin. “People will pay for what provides value for them and that’s the same as it always was, whether it’s in the old economy or the new economy. Business should be reassured by that.”

Social Influence Marketing

Fergal Coleman - Tuesday, February 09, 2010
 Razorfish the well known US digital agency have produced this interesting presentation on the value of social media as part of a combined marketing approach. They have coined the term Social Influence Marketing which is essentially a customer-centric approach to marketing.

Australians Spend Most Time On Social Networking

Fergal Coleman - Monday, February 08, 2010
According to research done by Nielsen in October 2009, Australians spend the most time on social networks.

This was reported on in detail in Economist 30 January 2010.



For an interview with the Economist reporter Martin Giles click below.
 

How independent film makers can use the internet to engage fans, create hype and awareness

Fergal Coleman - Thursday, January 14, 2010
This week we conducted a workshop with an independent film production company with regard to developing an online marketing strategy for their upcoming production. (More on this in future blogs)

While conducting our research prior to the workshop it struck me that the internet, and its potential for innovation, has been under-utilised by the smaller independent production companies in this industry to get a leap on the big players. Having said that there are some notable examples of innovative use of internet to generate hype, awareness and to build community around movies. (By big and small players)

Read the Wired article for more on Indie use of the web (we covered one below)

Below are some good examples from Mainstream and Indie productions:

1. Snakes on a Plane: This movie was perhaps the first to make extensive use of the web. Fans were given access to a Wiki where they could contribute to the script, fans also created posters and short movies online. This created significant hype before the movie was launched. IN addition a telephone campaign was launched where fans could send a semi-personalised message from Samual L Jackson to a number of their choosing.

For more go to:

http://snakeplay.pbworks.com/

2. Cloverfield: More recently the movie Cloverfieldwas supported by an internet campaign that sought to play out the story of the movie in the online world. Characters on the movie had their own blogs that were updated to correspond with important dates in the movie. Fictional products used in the movie were given their own corporate websites and fans were even asked to provide feedback for the development of new products. News postings were also put on YouTube to cover some of the major events in the movie. This was an extremely clever way to build up the sense of anticipation about the movie and was a truly immersive campaign for fans.
The movie also made use of more mainstream ideas such as widgets with embedded video, which were used to create a viral campaign, allowing fans to post the widget on their webpages, blogs and social networking pages.
http://www.moviemarketingmadness.com/blog/2008/01/17/movie-marketing-madness-cloverfield/

http://www.cloverfieldmovie.com/

Created websites:
http://www.slusho.jp/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KarNwKx5mGY

http://jamieandteddy.com/


3. Starwreck - Finnish director Timo Vuorensola released a Star Trek/Babylon 5 spoof on his Web site in 2005.
Star Wreck proved to be the beginning of a journey into related short films, fan productions, chat boards, and a role-playing game. Between sales of DVDs, merchandise, and TV rights, the franchise netted upwards of $400,000 — enough to fund his next movie.

See http://www.starwreck.com/ for more

Do you have any good examples to share? Contribute your thoughts in the comments box below.

Online Businesses v. Bricks and Mortar

Fergal Coleman - Sunday, November 29, 2009
Bricks and Mortar retailers are building new strategies and tactics to take on e-tailers.
Report from the Economist, 26th November 2009.
http://www.economist.com/businessfinance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=14973087

SHOPPERS on Black Friday, the traditional start of the holiday shopping season in America, which falls on November 27th this year, are notoriously aggressive. Some even start queuing outside stores before dawn to be the first to lay their hands on heavily discounted merchandise. Last year berserk bargain-hunters in the suburbs of New York City trampled a Wal-Mart employee to death. Despite the frenzy at many stores, however, the recession appears to have accelerated the pace at which shoppers are abandoning bricks and mortar in favour of online retailers—e-tailers, in the jargon. So this year Black Friday (so named because it is supposed to put shops into profit for the year) also marks the start of many conventional retailers’ attempts to regain the initiative.

E-commerce holds particular appeal in straitened times as it enables people to compare prices across retailers quickly and easily. Buyers can sometimes avoid local sales taxes online, and shipping is often free. No wonder, then, that online shopping continues to grow even as the offline sort shrinks. In 2008 retail sales grew by a feeble 1% in America and are expected to decline by more than 3% this year, according to the National Retail Federation, a trade body. In contrast, online sales grew by 13% in 2008 to over $141 billion and are predicted to grow by 11% in 2009, according to Forrester, a consultancy.

Online sales now account for 6% of all retail sales in America (up from 5% in 2008) and that figure is expected to reach 8% by 2013. E-commerce is also growing in Europe and Asia, where online sales in 2008 totalled $60 billion and $40 billion, respectively. In Britain, internet shopping now accounts for nearly 4% of total retail sales, according to Planet Retail, a research firm.

Online-only shopping sites such as Amazon and eBay, two e-commerce giants, have thrived in the downturn. Amazon’s sales rose to around $5.5 billion in the third quarter of the year, up by almost 30% from a year before. Listings, chiefly from commercial vendors, have surged so rapidly on eBay that its website briefly crashed on November 21st.

The range of items available online is also growing. Amazon has started selling groceries. Consumer-goods companies such as Procter & Gamble (P&G) are encouraging the sale of things like nappies (diapers) and laundry detergent online. At the opposite extreme, the internet is also being used to sell luxury goods. Fabergé, a defunct jewellery-maker known for its gem-encrusted eggs, relaunched in September. It will not open any shops but will instead operate only online.

The shift in spending to the internet is good news for companies like P&G that lack retail outlets of their own. But it is a big concern for brick-and-mortar retailers, whose prices are often higher than those of e-tailers, since they must bear the extra expense of running stores. Happily, however, conventional retailers are in a better position to fight back than last year, when overstocking forced them to resort to ruinous discounting. Inventories are about 15% lower this year. Some big retailers, such as Saks and Target, have recently reported rising revenues and margins.

The most obvious response to the growth of e-tailing is for conventional retailers to redouble their own efforts online. The online arms of big retailers are performing well, on the whole. Saks, for example, saw online sales rise 9% in the nine months to the end of October while sales in its stores fell by 19%. The company expects online growth to outpace sales in stores for the “foreseeable future”, says Stephen Sadove, its boss.

The concept of “multichannel” shopping, where people can buy the same items from the same retailer in several different ways—online, via their mobile phones and in shops—is gaining ground, and retailers are trying to encourage users of one channel to try another. Growing online traffic may actually increase sales in stores too. According to a spokesman for Macy’s, a department-store chain, every dollar a consumer spends online with Macy’s leads to $5.70 in spending at a Macy’s store within ten days, because consumers learn about other products online and come into stores to look them over before buying them. Many online retailers offer tools that let people locate the nearest outlet that has a given item in stock.

Retailers are also trying make shopping seem fun and exciting to counteract the economic gloom. One common tactic is to set up “pop-up” stores, which appear for a short time before vanishing again, to foster a sense of novelty and urgency. Following the lead of many bricks-and-mortar outfits, eBay recently launched a pop-up in New York where customers could inspect items before ordering them from kiosks.

Shoppers are increasingly looking for an “experience” when they go to stores, says Jack Anderson of Hornall Anderson, a branding and marketing firm, and are no longer interested in purely “transaction-based bricks and mortar stores”. Apple, which encourages customers to try out its devices in its stores, is considered a pioneer of this strategy, and has attracted many imitators. The Walt Disney Company, for example, is rumoured to be redesigning its stores to attract shoppers looking for entertainment, with new features such as “magic mirrors”, which will allow children to play with Disney characters.

Stores are also trying to lure customers by offering services that are not available online. Best Buy, a consumer-electronics retailer, has started selling music lessons along with its musical instruments. Lululemon athletica, which sells sports clothes, offers free yoga classes. The idea is to bring people back to its shops regularly, increasing the likelihood that they will develop the habit of shopping there.

Another great hope is that mobile phones will come to the rescue of conventional retailers. Some consumers already use internet-enabled handsets to shop online. But many analysts think a technology called near-field communication (NFC) might boost sales at stores, by allowing shoppers to scan products with their phones to learn more about them, and then to pay by swiping their phones at the till. Unfortunately, NFC will not be widely available for some time—too late to help harried retailers through Black Friday.

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