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The March 23rd roundtable focused on Monetizing Social & Mobile Media. The roundtable explored various ways companies utilize online communities to generate sales. Industry leaders discussed their best practices and strategies on Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare, Tumblr, blogger outreach, localization, and creating viral campaigns.

Razorfish: Paul Gelb, Vice President, Mobile Practice Lead

Paul helps clients on the road to innovation by pioneering media and development executions in mobile and integrated campaigns across digital out of home, broadband video, interactive television, social networks, and gaming.

In an ever changing media landscape, Paul is also a trusted consultant to Razorfish’s largest clients as they evolve their media and business strategies to include breakthrough technology and advanced platforms. Paul’s mobile clients include Unilever, Citibank, Ford, Mercedes Benz, Kraft, JCPenney, Staples, Ralph Lauren, Victoria’s Secret, Gilt Groupe, Tory Burch, Amway, Starwood, Intel, Dell, AT&T, QVC, The Hollywood Reporter, Terra, Morgan Stanley Smith Barney and T Rowe Price.

Paul was awarded the 2010 Media All Star Award by Mediaweek. He was recognized for his Ralph Lauren work with a mobile marketer of the year award and for his Mercedes work with Mobi and MIN awards. He has created concepts for five applications featured in the iTunes app store, one application featured on CNBC, the top branded iPhone application of 2008 and a top free iPad application.

Twitter: @paulgelb

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Twitter Roundtable: October 29th, 2009.

Below is a quick synopsis of some of the topics that were discussed at the October roundtable.

How Twitter Changing Business

MN – as startup, single person, can’t cold call and get to blue ribbon companies like Hasbro, Disney, etc.  Her reputation as a trusted source within a specific niche had them find her.  Had time to “create my voice” – authentic, true, being on Twitter since August 07 to build that and then launching site August 2008.  Companies then know what they are getting with the voice.  She always discloses if sponsored; rarely sell CPM – sell package

DB – What metrics do you provide, # of exposures to tweet?

MN – Mostly bought by PR than traditional media, so look less at response rates and metrics than bigger picture.  There are the basic tweet metrics – # of potential views is followers * number of posts; bit.ly can help measure number of clicks; number of retweets;respond to retweets, so talking about the sponsored CONVERSATION vs. just the sponsor when someone says “yes I really love those guys too” I’m going to react to that

CM – Don’t know many companies who could duplicate what Melanie has done, the single voice and authenticity; most companies don’t know what they are doing; thus TweetMix can assimilate a lot of that and help shape it

JD – Companies don’t know what works, how to leverage Twitter

CM – They don’t have the luxury of doing

TH – There is significant pressure to do something; people now expect some feedback; brand that took a century to be build can be broken down now quite quickly; it’s a terrible time to be a CMO

RE– That’s what Tlists tries to do, bridge that gap between publishers and advertisers.  Publishers like Huffington Post are creating lists of people interested around different themes; advertisers want to reach contextually relevant, find the closes fitting groups talking about a theme.  The issues for advertisers is stil how to integrate themselves INTO those feeds

JS – Most business models out there are brands pay but don’t know value; plus they are scared what comes out of mouths of users.  So instead of creating Twitter business models that focus on being paid by ads, need to find businesses or ways of getting people to spend money – reviews platform is sold to people who are used to having review.  Media people don’t know how to buy anything except on a CPM basis

PP – there’s a pre-set mindset of how to market the brand; over time companies that don’t get it will either be pulled in against their will or have a very large PR problem.  With Stocktwits we get a lot of comments around the stock price, but a lot of comments on company fundamentals as well.  [asks Chris if he has some sort of orientation for companies he works with when he takes them on]

CM– If you walk in and they don’t get it, walk out.  As a startup you don’t have time to teach and drag along a client; Duke basketball team: wanted to have a human face, give players chance to express themselves; they are trusting people with their brand.  The view it as good for fans and schools, looking at potentially expanding to faculty.  Is there ROI – It’s super cheap ($1K per month) and its experimental – a Twitter aggregator destination site.  They can do merchandising off of it; not a big risk

RE – Cant make money work as effectively because less mass audience – now all niche audiences and have to figure how to get to them, and some don’t want to be reached.  What conversations will be there in the future?  Do they care for brands in the conversation and how would they be integrated?  How do you make business work within that environment?

Is $3 million budget easier to spend because you have niches vs. $100 million budget?

Roy – People can’t make mind up on what niches are; there is a critical mass in the US, but no critical mass in  Euro countries so more difficult

D – For an enterprise software company, B2B, can’t reason that when doing social – the upper management want concrete (read traditional) way of measuring social

EK – Twitter gives us access to customer, initial thought is driven by greed – how can we sell; instead go for free feedback, help debugging products from savvy customers; at this stage you can’t use ROI metrics, but use intuition.  How do you quantify something that brings a new product feature?  Spending $3-5 million to explore

MN – Thinking of how Kodak uses Twitter, its leadership that has personality as well, users get invested in it and are rooting for you; Mashable can bring traffic and value in one tweet the companies used to spend millions of dollars to achieve; leadership can’t be behind the ivory tower.  Great opportunity for CEO/CMO to talk directly to consumers like never before; plus completely democratic in people can choose to or not to follow.  Companies that are most sincere are going to win.

JS – But what you are doing can’t scale.  And Kodak spending $3-5 million out of a huge budget is not scale.  How do you build scalable, investible business model around social media?  Hasn’t happened in mobile yet

MN – There is scalability in influence of a brand

DB – biggest challenge of social media is to decouple from paid media

JS – What Kodak is doing is a one-off basis; getting media buyer to try something on a one off basis?  Good luck.  Not going to pay because its not tested compared to what they know works in mass media TV budgets; selling one-offs is an impossible task

PP – We’re in an early stage of buying a new communication media and its painful and ugly and startups will get run over

JS– we need innovation and business models for social media

JD – we’re not just bean counting.  We’re not a tech company, but a marketing research company.  By talking as market research company, brands have the understanding/concept of research and a market research budget they can tap; use us because they want to know what people are saying

JS—Movie studios spend 40 million on ads to launch a movie; if they blurt after the movie, putting on a 1-5 scale during a test launch; and we add mobile phone prefixes to see where the movie plays well and where it doesn’t, now can tap those very real budgets that exist, help them tap into audience feelings to adjust the budget – that adds value.

JD – Anticipation vs reaction, Bruno vs Hangover

The Twitter Effect and Bruno

DB – most of my friends taste on movies are crap

TH – The Twitter Effect study – is it real or just hype; Twitter is only used by 10-12% of movie attendees and its at the bottom of the list in terms of influence, so really a minimal effect, but studios can’t let go of it as a reality.

RE – Buddy Media went through several iterations of business model – started to be heavy app developer but it doesn’t scale – hand to hand combat with brands.  Then when agencies realized they had to staff up around social to offer, so we targeted agencies for a great feeder effect; then focused on the metrics and infrastructure, now creating templates for Facebook pages to manage experience, promotions, etc.  They pay X, you can count the clicks

DB – we weren’t sure for a while whether you were an agency competitor or not, now easier to work with you guys

D – from B2B stand, it takes six months for a sale; we’ll do a little bit but wait for the B2C guys to figure it out first; ideastorm by Dell turned complaints concept and framed it as a suggestion box to make the company better – so out of customer support into product development

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Tweetmixx: Tweetmixx is a byproduct of Mixx and allows one to focus on the subject matters they are interested in, by finding the relevant links on Twitter.

Attending: Chris McGill, CEO
Twitter: @tweetmixx

Stocktwits: StockTwits is an open, community-powered idea and information service for investments. Users can eavesdrop on traders and investors, or contribute to the conversation and build their reputation as savvy market wizards. The service takes financial related data – using Twitter as the content production platform – and structures it by stock, user, reputation, etc.

Attending: Philip Pearlman, Angel investor and Director of Community
Twitter: @ppearlman

TweetPhoto: TweetPhoto is a photo sharing platform for the real-time web. It allows you to share photos on Twitter, Facebook and through your favorite desktop and mobile clients.

Attending: Dan Caulfield, Investor
Twitter: @tweetphoto

SavvyAuntie: SavvyAuntie.com is the first and only community for Aunts. It enables and empowers Aunts to exchange ideas, get advice, find gifts and connect with other Savvy Aunties.

Attending: Melanie Notkin, Founder & CEO
Twitter: @savvyauntie

TweetFeel: TweetFeel gathers real-time Twitter data about whatever search term the user has entered, and then evaluates those tweets for positive and negative feelings. TweetFeel monitors a large and growing set of indicators. The service roams Twitter to uncover any relevant chatter and determine whether that chatter is positive or negative.

Attending: Jean Davis, Co-Founder
Twitter: @tweetfeeldotcom@JeanMarie50

TalkingSocial: TalkingSocial™ is focused on developing and bringing useful and engaging voice related apps to mobile and social media platforms. It is a privately funded startup located in New York City. It’s core service,  Blurts™ app adds the power of voice–texture, tone, emotion and authenticity— to any Twitter conversation. It allows Twitterers to record audio and post to Twitter in text or voice format. Anyone with a mobile phone can quickly create short, 20-second soundbytes or Blurts™ (at anytime from anywhere) that are instantly posted to their Twitter account as voice Tweets.

Attending: Jeffrey Stier, CEO and Founder

KodakEliezer Lubitch: VP Business Development
Eliezer Lubitch is a Vice President at the office of Kodak’s Chief Business Development Officer. Mr. Lubitch joined Eastman Kodak in 2004, as part of the acquisition of Scitex Digital Printing. Mr. Lubitch joined Scitex in 1991 as software engineer, and held various positions in R&D, algorithms research and product management. In 1996, Mr. Lubitch joined the corporate team to lead investments in imaging and information companies. In 1999, Mr. Lubitch joined Scitex America, to develop new markets, strategic accounts and partnerships. Mr. Lubitch has a long and successful track record of identifying technology -driven products and taking them through successful commercialization.
Twitter: @EliLubitch

360iDavid Berkowitz, Sr. Director Emerging Media & Innovation
Senior Director of Emerging Media & Innovation for agency 360i. A frequent speaker and media pundit, he has been published hundreds of times in MediaPost, Ad Age, eMarketer, and elsewhere.

Blog: www.marketersstudio.com
Twitter: @dberkowitz

OTXTom Harbeck: SVP Strategy & Marketing
Tom is SVP Strategy & Marketing for global consumer research and consulting firm OTX. He’s been the CMO and Creative Director (usually simultaneously) for brand enlightened companies across diverse media and packaged goods categories.

Most recently CMO Applegate Farms, and prior as CMO/ Executive Creative Director of $500MM book and magazine publisher, Rodale. Tom lead strategic marketing and the maverick creative teams of leading cable TV networks (TNT, TBS, Nickelodeon, Nick Jr., TV Land, Sundance Channel) for 12 years before joining start-up iFilm to lead  programming/Marketing. Tom’s career started at Atari in 1981, followed by eight plus years in advertising at Chiat/Day and Ogilvy & Mather where he began as an account person and morphed into a commercial producer.

Twitter: @OTXResearch

Roger Ehrenberg, Angel Investor
Roger Ehrenberg is an active NY-based angel investor through IA Capital Partners, LLC, and has made over 30 seed-stage investment since 2005 including TheLadders.com, bit.ly, Buddy Media, Clickable, Covestor, Domdex, Invite Media, Stocktwits, TweetDeck.

Roger spent 17 years on Wall Street in M&A, Derivatives and Trading, leaving in late 2004 to focus full-time on seed-stage investing and incubation. Roger also pens the business and technology blog Information Arbitrage, and is a recognized thought-leader in the areas of hedge funds, regulation and market structure. Roger also runs own quantitative trading firm, Kinetic Trading Strategies.

Blog: www.informationarbitrage.com
Twitter: @infoarbitrage

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Our topic for this month’s roundtable is ‘Social Media” and how companies are embracing it. The roundtable will cover what companies may or may not be doing in regards to social media and how they can leverage it to best benefit them. We will be touching on many issues from best practices, user engagement, relationship building, brand building, consumer communication, mobile, and customer acquisition.

We have a great group of companies and people for this event as they comprise successful startups, industry executives and investors. You can see a complete list with brief bios below.

Trendrr: Trendrr captures and illustrates accurate, real-time market intelligence in an easy-to-use, digestible format. Users can track pre-set data sources or review others’ graphs to discover trends as they happen.

Attending: Mark Ghuneim, Founder & CEO
Twitter: @trendrr

Foursquare: Foursquare is a location based social network that incorporates gaming elements. They are all about helping people find new ways to explore the city. It allows you to meet up with friends and allows you to earn points and unlock badges for discovering new places, doing new things and meeting new people.

Attending: Dennis Crowley, Co-founder & CEO
Twitter: @foursquare@dens

Appssavvy:  Appssavvy connects web publishers and developers with the world’s largest and most visible brands, specifically around widgets and applications. It provides advertisers with contextually-relevant targeted media opportunities reaching an audience of more than 50 million unique online consumers enjoying social media application

Attending: Michael Burke, Co-founder & President
Twitter: @appssavvy

Affinitive: Affinitive is a Word of Mouth (WOM) and social media marketing and technology

company. It engages, empowers, and connects passionate consumers by giving them the tools to express their passion for the brands, products, services, and causes they love, thereby cultivating conversation, long-lasting loyalty, and sustained awareness.

Attending: Bob Troia
Twitter: @affinitive@bobtroia

MTVNJoshua Dern, Former SVP & GM Social Media

Joshua is a senior digital media exec, artist, and designer. He has spent over 15 years creating digital experiences for some of the best known media brands. Most recently he was SVP & GM of Social Media for MTV Networks.

Barnes & NobleKevin Ryan, VP Social Media

A social media strategist with deep roots in all facets of content and social commerce, Kevin Ryan leads customer engagement communities for Barnes & Noble, including the company’s online book clubs, the My B&N reviews and recommendations platform, its blogs, and its presence on Facebook and Twitter.

He started the First Look Book Club, a forum that generates early buzz for pre-release books, and established the search-and-share feature that commerce-enabled the company’s discussion boards. Before Barnes & Noble, Kevin built and managed content programs at a number of consumer websites.

Twitter: @KevinSRyan

Hachette Filipacchi MediaTodd Anderman, SVP, Digital Media

Todd Anderman, named Senior Vice President, Digital Media, for Hachette Filipacchi Media U.S. in January 2008, is responsible for the company’s web sites, mobile business as well as other emerging platforms. Over the course of Anderman’s career, he has successfully built and expanded a number of brands in the digital space.

Hearst Magazines Digital MediaMatthew Milner, VP, Social Media

Matthew is the VP of Social Media for Hearst Digital Media. He received his MBA from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern, and his BA in literature from Cornell University. Prior to graduate school, Matthew worked in marketing and business development in the music business. After completing his studies at Kellogg, he worked in Sales & Trading on Wall Street, most recently at Lehman Brothers. He left Wall Street to write a romantic comedy called Guy Critical, and soon launched a site to market his novel. That site, originally called GuyCritical.com, “Where Women Can Ask Guys Anything,” eventually grew to become a social media platform called Answerology. Answerology was acquired by Hearst Digital Media in 2008.

OutbrainYaron Galai, Angel Investor,Co-founder and CEO,

Yaron is the Co-Founder and CEO. Prior to founding Outbrain, Mr. Galai was Co-Founder, SVP of Quigo, Inc. (www.quigo.com), a provider of performance-based marketing solutions for advertisers and premium publishers. He previously served as the CEO of the company for three years. Quigo was acquired by AOL in December 2007. Previously, Mr. Galai was Co-Founder & VP Business Development at Ad4ever, a developer of rich-media advertising technologies for the web which was later acquired by Atlas (a division of aQuantive – www.aquantive.com). Earlier, he was the Founder of NetWorks Web Design – an SEO and web design firm. At NetWorks he oversaw the production and search engine optimization of over 30 websites.

Blog: www.webx0.com
Twitter: @YaronGalai

Bessemer VenturesSarah Tavel, Associate

Sarah Tavel is an Associate at Bessemer Venture Partners. She focuses on the software, eCommerce and Internet sectors and has been closely involved in the Diapers.com, Metalogix, Yodle, Cornerstone OnDemand, Onestop, and CPower investments.  She also is involved with Bessemer’s investments in Intego, OLX and Parallels.

Sarah joined BVP in 2006. Earlier, she was a consultant for The Kerdan Group, a startup strategy consulting firm.

Twitter: @adventurista
Blog at www.adventurista.com

EDventure HoldingsEsther Dyson,  Angel Investor

Esther is a long-time catalyst of start-ups in information technology in the US and other markets, including Russia. Since selling her company, EDventure Holdings, to CNET Networks in 2004, she have taken on newer challenges in private aviation and space as well as in health care (as a director of 23andMe, a consumer genetics company). Esther’s IT investments have included Flickr and del.icio.us (both sold to Yahoo!), and  Medstory (sold to Microsoft), as well as Meetup, Eventful.comBoxbe and Voxiva. Esther is also an active investor in air and space, with holdings in Space Adventures and Zero-G Corporation, as well as XCOR AerospaceConstellation Services InternationalCoastal Technologies GroupDopplr.comAirship Ventures and Icon Aircraft.

Twitter: @edyson

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Social media has been and continues to be a major theme among individuals and businesses.  People use it to connect with friends, family, colleagues, acquaintances, and even strangers. They use social networks, tools, and media to find commonalities amongst each other. Businesses use it as a way to market their products, brand, extend their reach, improve customer loyalty, acquire new customers and so on it is used as a tool to garner attention from the masses. In fact according to the Engagement DB, companies embracing social media grew revenues by 18 percent in the past 12 months.

Businesses are becoming more familiar and adapting social media, networks, and tools much more today than ever before as they see the power it has to extend their influence to their target base. They finally understand that social networking is not only about interacting with friends but also a way for them to interact with brands and companies.

According to Anderson Analytics’ May 2009 survey—52% of social network users had become a fan or follower of a company or brand, while 46% had said something good about a brand or company on a social networking Website—double the percentage who had said something negative (23%).

In fact more and more companies are using brand pages and applications to interact with their customers, one specific way is by using them to deliver coupons and offers to consumers to drive trials, store traffic and response. For example, a July 2009 Starbucks promotion, distributed coupons for a free pastry via Facebook and other social outlets. The chain was soon one of the top trending topics on Twitter and the top brand on Facebook, with more than 3.7 million fans.

Granted this is just one way businesses use social media. The other which has been proven to have an immeasurable effect is the way it enables businesses to hear from their customers, observe interaction between customers, increase trust and build credibility by expanding beyond traditional marketing messages and participate in “communities” with customers.

In fact social media is becoming so main stream that traditional companies — FordLevi Strauss, Best Buy, and Papa John’s, to name a few — are revamping their marketing operations to embrace their customers, rebrand products, and benefit from the social-media bonanza. In taking these steps, they have created online communities and encouraging their customers, follower, fans, or friends to directly talk and speak to them.

By no means are all traditional companies embracing social media, in fact most companies are taking a wait and see approach and continue to rely on TV, radio, and print for their advertising. However, companies like Best Buy and Ford who are forward thinkers are leading the way as they realize this is where their customers are and will be.

To that end I have listed below four ways social media can benefit companies from the start and if they stay the course can truly reap the rewards of social media.

•Customer Acquisition. Companies should integrated elements of Facebook and Twitter, the two most popular and wide reaching. A great example of using these as tools was the national pizza chain Papa John’s which added 148,000 fans on Nov. 17 through a guerrilla marketing campaign on Facebook. It offered a free medium pizza to anyone who signed up to be its fan on Facebook. The promotion gained it thousands of customers and drove its Web traffic up 253%. It now has more than 300,000 fans and hopes to top 1 million by the end of the year.

Word-of-mouth marketing. Customers are the best evangelists for a company. Nine in 10 consumers trust their peers more than marketers, according to a recent survey of 25,000 by Nielsen. Starbucks tapped into WOM by starting MyStarbucksIdea in which customers can submit ideas for the company which are then voted on by other users, the best of which will be implemented by the company. One other example is by HP which used Twitter to power a scavenger hunt at a recent conference.

•Enhance customer service. Southwest Airlines heavily involved in the Twitter community, using the service to inform their customers know about deals among other things. In fact when a customer who had recently flown Southwest Airlines and found the airport check-in a two-button breeze, something which he mentioned on Twitter. Next thing he know he receives a “thank you” from the airline a few hours later.

Speak directly to customers. Blogs, Twitter or Facebook can be an ideal forum for customers to offer their  candid viewpoints to companies. For better or for worse companies respond to positive and negative feedback. Brian Kalma, Head of User Experience and Web Strategy of Zappos confirmed that bad reviews as well as good are a part of the consumer story and need to be respected and seen as an opportunity to provide better products and services.

As you can see, I am a believer that companies will have no choice but to embrace social media as that is where there customers are and will be going. The ones who are reluctant to will see their customers move to their competitors.

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It seems that every publication whether print or online seems to be talking about Twitter, and rightfully so. The latest numbers indicate that Twitter is getting roughly $50 million a month in media coverage which is nothing short of astronomical (it  equates to $600 million for the year).  What’s even more mind boggling is that Twitter’s founders have yet to make a dime off their innovation and they’re still working on a revenue model.

Don’t get me wrong, I am an avid tweeter (@fndrsroundtable) and understand the value of Twitter for the individual, small business, large corporation, organizations and pretty much anyone who want to leverage themselves or their business.  However, according to the latest reports 69% of adults have no clue what Twitter is or what a tweet looks like. That is a pretty high percentage but I will look at that as the growth potential Twitter has as the 31% of adults who are aware of Twitter are doing a bang up job on publicizing it virally .

To that end I do want to point out that Twitter just made a huge jump to reach all the masses with their new home page which brings the value of Twitter front and center,  that is “Trending Topics” which highlight what’s currently happening in the Twitterverse (Twitter Universe) – hence what I attribute most of the free media coverage to.

Twitter has allowed people anywhere in the world to share stories, news, and excitement with their friends and anyone else who cares to listen. From the Iran elecetion, US Airways crash on the HudsonMichael Jacksons death and many more, the list keeps going. It brings the power of information to anyone who wants it, giving users the ability to discover and relate breaking news which now can be seen by anyone on the Twitter homepage. Until now the trending topics was only visible to those who have twitter accounts, now it can be seen by anyone and hopefully everyone who has yet to see the value in Twitter will start seeing what all the hoopla is about and see the value in it.

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