FourSquare Who?

[In case you haven't noticed, I haven't had a lot of time to blog here lately.  So this is my attempt at banging something out that is a) relevant and b) quick and to the point.  A theme I hope to continue...]

“Mobile + Location Aware” are the buzzwords du jour.  A year or two ago, this is what had Foursquare on everyone’s radar.  So when I saw this Mashable article on Top 5 Foursquare Mistakes Committed by Small Businesses, two things immediately came to mind.

The first was, “What would my buddy James over at The Social Business think?”  (and, yes, that’s a bit of a shameless plug, but if you’re a small business owner here in Central Oregon, struggling with the ever-changing landscape of social marketing, James is a great resource.)  The second was, “Isn’t the #1 mistake wasting time worrying about FourSquare?”

Admittedly, I have little/no interest in Foursquare.  ’Never particularly got into that scene, nor do I plan to.  But it does seem like there’s been a some fal off in the buzz on this front.  And data from Alexa seems to confirm that:

Maybe it’s just me, but if I were a small 1-5 person business, I’d focus my efforts where I’d get the most bang for the buck: Twitter, Facebook (who I work for, admittedly), Google…  FourSquare would pretty far down my list.

 

Thoughts?


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Redefining Libraries in the Digital Era

 

Hopefully I don’t need to convince you that the digital-book tidal wave is headed our way.  But in case I do, have a read of this lengthy-but-fascinating interview (more of a discussion, really) by authors Barry Eisler and Joe Konrath about Eisler’s recent decision to turn down a $500,000 book contract in favor of self-publishing his next novel, and the reasoning behind it.  The entire article is quote worthy; they go into juicy detail  about royalty figures, trends in digital content, pricing strategies… you name it.

‘Still not convinced?  Check out USA Today’s article about Amanda Hocking, a 26-year old author who has sold over 500,000 copies of her self-published books. Her words: “More than 99% were e-books”.  And then there are the 8 million people bought a Kindle last year and the 7 million who bought iPads.  All told, according to this IDC report, over 22 million e-readers were sold last year.  The forecast for 2011 is 59 million units, and for 2012?  87 million units. Readers are demanding digital content in ever increasing numbers.

The implications for the traditional book publishing industry are as obvious as they are ominous.  But what about those other shrine’s to books, the ones every community in America has built …

When the printed word is no longer “printed”, what happens to our libraries?

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Ruby On Ales Coming Soon

Quick reminder that the Ruby on Ales conference is taking place next Thursday and Friday (24th & 25th)!

The speaker lineup looks pretty interesting, even for non-rubyists.  For example, I’m pretty curious about the test-driven-design for JavaScript talk.  And real-time systems talk will be an interesting contrast with the node.js work I’ve been doing lately.

So check it out.  I suspect there’s something in there for everyone.  And speaking from a purely Central-Oregon-selfish perspective, this is the kind of thing we need more of around here, so your support will be appreciated, I’m sure.


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Ruby On Ales

Nevermind that Ruby On Ales is possibly the coolest name and concept for a conference I’ve seen in a long time, (I mean, “Rails Conf”??? *pfft*!) the best part is that it’s right here in our backyard! From the site:

Ruby on Ales is a two-day, single track conference inspired by Ruby, microbrews, and shredding. Listen to engaging speakers, compete in a one-day rumble, and slake your thirst on local microbrews. Reserve a seat and plan to ski, board, or tube when you attend the first annual Ruby on Ales Conference in Bend, Oregon

So if you’re into Ruby/Rails development, this’ll be a great conference to come to.  The gang putting it on are smart and passionate about software and, hey, if the talks suck (they won’t, I’m sure!) Mt. Bachelor is only 30 minutes away and they’ve got 100″ of base at mid-mountain last I checked.  ;-)


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Rethinking the Kindle


Exhibit A, top right, is the Amazon’s Kindle e-reader, as it ships today.  My wife recently purchased two of these for our anniversary.   She bought the 3G version, including the nice leather cover w/ built-in book light, and a handful of e-books to get us started.  Total cost for both, ~$500.

Exhibit B, bottom right, is what I wish she could have bought.  Having used the Kindle for a few months, I thought I’d take a stab at mocking up what I’m really looking for in an e-book reader, and this is the result.  Let me elaborate … Read the rest of this entry »


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Connected-ness

‘Saw a really interesting presentation yesterday by James Fowler, co-author of,  ”Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives“.  The book describes how we are influenced by the people close to us. For example, if you are close friends with someone who is (or becomes) obese, this dramatically increases your risk for obesity the likelihood you, too, are obese.  Same goes for smoking and depression.  What’s interesting about this is that the influence of your social network is detectable up to three, even four, degrees of separation away.   I.e. if your friend’s father’s sister-in-law is obese… well, you just gained five pounds, sorry.  :)

Sound far-fetched?  Watch the TED Talk by James’ co-author, Nicholas Christakis, and judge for yourself.

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Join the unConference at TechSpaceBend!


In partnership with The Bend Venture Conference

and sponsored by Silver Moon Brewing,

TechSpaceBend presents:


TechSpace unConference

October 14, 2010

2:30pm @ TechSpaceBend

906 NW Harriman St.


Want to learn about the startup scene in Bend, meet local entrepreneurs, and enjoy a beer?

Our unConference is no ordinary event! It’s an interactive session where like-minded folks gather for a few hours of idea sharing and collaborative discussion.

We welcome anyone attending the Bend Venture Conference (or not) to stop by and take part. We have an open-garage setting which makes it easy to drop in for a few minutes or a few hours.

Who should come?

Anyone with the desire to listen or participate in conversations about business as it relates to online, mobile, software, digital media, cleantech, etc.

This means students, graduates, wannapreneurs, emerging entrepreneurs, developers, designers, sales & marketing experts, and anyone else who want to take part in an exciting, fruitful event at which you can learn something, build new valuable relationships, and have a beer or two!

Who’s hosting?

TechSpace unConference will be organised and hosted by the media mogul Lewis Howell and local entrepreneur James Gentes (Founder at The Social Business): they will be responsible for keeping the conversation lively and the beer flowing (thanks Silver Moon!)

Outside of TechSpaceBend

Inside of TechSpaceBend

Fee

Your time is your investment – the unConference is FREE!

Location

The TechSpace unConference will take place at the Old Cigar Building (906 NW Harriman St.), which is located across Harriman Street from the Blacksmith Restaurant and adjacent to Williams Allstate.


Presenter Rules

  • No Slides! (Whiteboard only)
  • 10 Minutes Max!

Draft Agenda (submit your topic as a comment to this post!)

Current topics proposed include:

  • Lessons learned 6 months after starting local social media agency (James Gentes)
  • How to (try to) make a million dollars combining Twitter with real-time stock trading (Patrick Meyer)
  • Startups Then and Now: The Game Has Changed … (Robert Kieffer)
  • What it takes to start a co-working facility like TechSpaceBend (Lewis Howell)
  • Bend and rap music saved my soul (Kerry Cotter)
  • How Twilio and Sendgrid are helping a local staffing startup succeed (Lloyd Fassett)

Thursday, Oct. 14th

Time Topic
2:30PM Beer from Silver Moon Brewing is served!
Topics are written on the whiteboard during 30 minutes of networking.
3:00PM – 5:00PM 10-minute sessions begin based on topics submitted by attendees.
Thanks to our sponsors!
silvermoonbrewingbendventure
Interested in presenting? Submit your topic below as a comment!!

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New Meetup Tomorrow!! Talks @TechSpaceBend – How Social Media is Changing Your Business

TechSpaceBend

We’re organizing a series of monthly talks @techspacebend, beginning with a local startup venture called ‘The Social Business’.

James will provide a good introductory overview of social media trends, and how businesses can use tools like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube to engage with their customers.

The presentation will be followed by a business-level discussion of the challenges encountered while starting a company like this in Bend.

What: Talks @TechSpaceBend – How Social Media is Changing Your Business

When: Tuesday, September 21, 2010 5:30 PM

Where: TechSpace Bend (Old Cigar Building)
906 NW Harriman St
Bend, OR 97701

RSVP to this Meetup


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Not-for-profit Tower Theatre uses social media to share customer experiences and build membership

This article is reposted with permission from The Social Business Blog:

The Tower Theatre in Bend, Oregon was originally built as a movie house in 1940, and now entertains 50,000 visitors a year with performing arts, civic, educational, and social events. Ray Solley, the Executive Director of the Theatre spoke with The Social Business about how they are reaching out through social media to engage with visitors and encouraging them to share their experiences. We’ll highlight the key business results they have observed and provide good examples of how non-profits can use the social web to build membership communities around their brands.

tower-theatre-foundation

Social Business Summary:

  • The Tower has a solid mission statement and sense of purpose that directs their use of social media, which is a significant achievement in itself. They aren’t looking at social media as a marketing channel. It’s about creating a dialog with their visitor community online.
  • The Tower has built an online presence for their business by posting event listings on their website and directing customers to interact with them on Facebook.
  • They engage with their community through social media and semi-monthly newsletters, and encourage visitors to publish reviews and share their experiences online.
  • They use email and Word of Mouth Marketing to drive new membership, and they have seen response shift away from traditional direct mail in favor of online marketing.
  • There are opportunities for them to create an active blog on their website, leverage location-based social networking tools, and monitor the social web for brand mentions and activity from past artists and performers.

The Tower Theatre has built an online presence for their business

“We began our social media campaign with a goal to raise enough funding from individual membership sales to reach our annual budget of $84,000,” said Ray. Since the Tower traditionally has used personalized letters, email, and phone calls, Ray saw social media as another channel that offers personal contact with their visitors. As a result, they are transitioning from a website that tells you about the Tower Theatre Foundation (the non-profit that is responsible for operating and maintaining the venue) to an online social presence where anyone can connect to the Tower and share their experiences. Their goal is to build emotional connections with visitors, so that they return or become season subscribers, which leads to becoming a member or annual contributor, then business sponsor.

The Tower’s brand is about the entire experience a visitor has, including the pricing of the tickets, the website,  the service in the foyer,  the quality of the performance, the comfort of the seats, and the walk to the parking lot. Tower is one of many options for a person’s entertainment dollar, and they need to stay attuned to customer satisfaction and value perception. They appreciate the significance and value of peer recommendations, and they want visitors to spread their comments, opinions, and criticisms on Facebook as a way of attracting more visitors to the Tower. Facebook also gives people a way to find out what’s going on, including tourists from outside the area.

They engage with their community through Facebook and semi-monthly newsletters and encourage visitors to share their experiences and review their brand

They’re able to manage Facebook comments with one person on their staff who also makes regular updates to the page. They’ve been able to provide customer service to visitors who leave comments on Facebook, and people also use a contact form on their website to send non-public feedback and other requests, which is important because it’s private. They once had a visitor complain about the ticketing system which they agreed with and were able to address it quickly.

The Tower’s newsletter goes out once every 10 days or so to members and patrons. With all of their attention focused on managing the website and Facebook communication, they haven’t yet created a formal blog on their site and Twitter is currently a secondary priority for their team. They hope to hire an intern to help with monitoring the social web for reviews and accurate business listings, but in the meantime they keep popular local sites such as VisitBend.org updated weekly with new performance listings.

They use email and Word of Mouth Marketing to drive new membership

They have 50,000 visitors per year and want to build advocates from this customer base by using promotions to foster dialog. Ray added, “we’ve discovered Facebook works well as a background marketing tool (as opposed to an active marketing tool) that helps spread the message of ‘why’ the Tower is a great place to visit rather than the ‘what’ is happening, which the website can do.” For example, they recently found an unusually high level of people ‘liking’ a post where they announced a band who had played at the Theatre won a Grammy. This indicated people were paying attention, and liked to hear about things related to artists/performances at the Tower.

While they haven’t measured the impact of their social media efforts yet, they are seeing good progress towards their membership goals. For example, they are seeing a 29% return rate from online contributions based on their email campaigns. Last year, direct mail response was 28%, this year it’s 13%. As a result, they are moving away from direct mail and plan to spend more on email and social media, and will eventually incorporate the newsletter into a Facebook tab.

The Social Business Recommends:

  • Consider adding a blog to the website as a way to highlight performing arts in a more detailed way than is appropriate for Facebook. This will help drive commentary, improve search engine ranking, and help convert visitors to subscribers for the monthly newsletter.
  • Ensure the Tower has a presence on location-based social network tools like Facebook Places, Foursquare, and Gowalla, which could help drive repeat visits by providing social incentives (a Tower Theatre badge) or discounts to frequent visitors. These are low-cost or free for the business and can be an effective way to recognize supporters.
  • Facebook fans have shown they are interested in hearing about important activities of the artists who have performed at the Tower. Look at actively monitoring the popular news articles for those artists (consider iLike.com) in addition to monitoring for comments related to the Tower that may be written by bloggers, on review sites,  or other news outlets.

The Tower is a great example of how non-profits can use the social web to build a membership community around their brand.

Do you have an opinion about the Tower or what other non-profits can do to leverage social media? Please share your thoughts!


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COISUG: August First Friday/Art Hop @ TechSpace Bend – Keenan Hall

This is a repost of this COISUG article

Come on down to TechSpace Bend for Art Hop – Beer and Art anyone?

- Keenan Hall


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