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South by Southwest Panel Picks 2014

South by Southwest 2014 Panel Picker: Vote NowWhile it seems March is long away, now is the time to pick which panels and speakers pique your interest for South by Southwest 2014. The Panel Picker process wraps up on Friday already!

For sure, it’s an overwhelming process, but I’ve committed, this year, to participating in the Panel Picker process.

Full disclosure: I have 2 proposed talks for 2014.

South by Southwest Interactive – Ticks vs Humans: Can Social Media Crush Pathogens?

3 Social Media pros, 4 University of Rhode Island interns, 30 years of tick research, and 1 @Tickguy aim to prevent tick-borne diseases — like Lyme disease — by engaging via new media and live events.

South by Southwest EDU – Ticks Suck: These Social Media Internships Don’t

Learn best practices – and best-to-be-avoided – from the University of Rhode Island’s inaugural Social Media SWAT team. Smashing traditional internship models, the team leveraged digital and social media to squash ignorance about the disease-carrying, scary, and hard-to-look-at tick. Paid interns, social media pro mentors, and URI faculty share how to revolutionize career preparation with real-world experience, creating sought-after, highly trained contributors to the workforce.

If you find either or both worthy, please vote now … time is running out.

Here are the other panels I hope to see at SXSW Interactive

1. Foremost, I’ve been eager to see Nancy Duarte since reading her books, Resonate and Slideology, which are excellent. But imagine engaging with Duarte in her expert medium.

Pimp Your Pitch: Learn Visual Storytelling
Panel picker submission excerpt: Everyone’s got a story to tell or an idea to sell. But your audience has to understand and embrace it if you truly want to motivate them to act. Bring your pitch to Duarte’s two and a half hour long Pimp Your Pitch workshop and we’ll help you rework it to better connect with your audience – whether you want to secure funding from a VC, sell your story to a filmmaker, convince a prospect to buy your product, or land a gig as a speaker at the next SXSW conference.

2. And how can you resist Go Home Marketing, You Are Drunk?
But upon closer inspection, it’s top content strategist and Content Strategy for the Web author Kristina Halvorson:
Panel picker submission excerpt: Stop treating every day like a fire drill. Momentarily ignore the shiny new trends. Instead, take a look at the things that are (still) fundamentally broken. Your message is splintered. Your teams are siloed. Your technology is backwards. Your content still sucks. So let’s sit down together and talk about a whole new world of marketing, one where pragmatism and principle drive a new kind of innovation: fixing what’s actually broken, versus finding new things to break.

3. How to Market Your Infographic Like a Rockstar
Panel picker submission excerpt: While visual content offers powerful marketing advantages, there are many unfortunate pitfalls one may encounter while attempting to build a content strategy in such a heavily saturated industry. In this session, Killer Infographics Director of Marketing, Charlie Holbert, will guide you through the highs and lows of marketing your infographic online. Having promoted thousands of viral infographics, Charlie will show you how to prepare your visual content for success, what mistakes to avoid and how to measure your ROI. You’ll leave this talk a true infographic “bielieber!”

4. Multiplier Effect – Paid Social + Inbound

Panel picker submission excerpt: Many marketers are focused on inbound marketing as the most cost effective and sustainable way to drive new high quality leads. Using paid social channels to amplify existing organic marketing can be a great way to amplify your existing inbound marketing. Organic marketing takes time to build and complementing it with paid promotion can help you grow your audience faster and when done right, with a high ROI. We’ll explore how to unite paid and organic marketing teams, how to track effectiveness, when is the best time to promote and most importantly, of the dizzying array of paid social options, which seem to be the most effective in complementing organic and inbound marketing.

5. Visual Storytelling in an Omni-Channel World
Panel picker submission excerpt: The rise of visual social media platforms has resulted in a show, don’t tell era that’s redefining marketing as we know it. Shrinking attention spans, coupled with platforms like Pinterest, Instagram and Vine, are creating consumers who welcome snackable bits of visual content over traditional marketing messages. The challenge and opportunity for marketers is to shift from broadcasting to curating a dazzling visual conversation which brings their company or brand’s story to life. – See more at: http://panelpicker.sxsw.com/vote/22970#sthash.2A8UJfqI.dpuf

6. Bootstrap it! Marketing Automation on a Budget
Panel picker submission excerpt: With 90 minutes of time every week and a total budget of less than $150 per month, you can get all your online marketing done easily and this talk will show you exactly how.

Which panels do you recommend?

Stop the Ticks: Send Us to South by Southwest Interactive

 

TickEncounter Resource Center

Humans vs. Ticks and Internships

Are humans smarter than ticks? According to Dr. Tom Mather at University of Rhode Island’s TickEncounter Resource Center, not by a long shot.

But ticks don’t have social media.

Leading a team 4 social media interns and 2 other social media professionals, we’ve spent the past 6 months fighting off ticks one tweet at a time. How’s that? Come again?

@TheTickGuy Dr Tom MatherA decades-long leading tick researcher, Dr. Mather saw an opportunity to harness social media to save lives and well-being. According to the CDC, Lyme disease rates are actually 10 times higher than what has been reported. In these parts, it’s hard to find people who haven’t been affected.

CBS News reports: “This new preliminary estimate confirms that Lyme disease is a tremendous public health problem in the United States, and clearly highlights the urgent need for prevention.”

Are ticks zombies in our midst? Here’s where we start to fight back

I narrowed down URI’s Harrington School of Communication’s best and brightest to become TickSmart interns. Thanks to Newport Interactive Marketers, I knew just which social media pros would be ideal social media mentors. Once we settled on an initial strategy and goals for this first-of-its kind project, the pros trained and mentored the Journalism, Marketing, PR, and Environmental Science/Writing majors.

The first challenge was nailing the messaging. How to train an intern to speak the language of tick researchers? Everyone adapted, and we found successes.

TickSmart Social Media Team Successes

  • Blogger outreach and guest posting
  • Building Pinterest boards without strictly showing pictures of ticks
  • Developing media outreach lists
  • Creating segmented newsletter content
  • Developing a TickSmart pledge card tool to link in-person events with ongoing relationships
  • Testing and engaging and growing followers and fans on Twitter and Facebook
  • Repurposing email content into SEO-rich blog posts

 

Some Welcome Social Media Surprises

  • Developing memes and enticing the tick research teams to create dozens more
  • Videoing a riff of a cult movie trailer
  • Presenting at South by Southwest Interactive

South by Southwest is still a work-in-progress, and I’d like your help!

South by Southwest InteractiveIf you’re not familiar with SXSW Interactive, it is the premier conference for social media professionals. In 2012, Interactive had 24,569 attendees, up 27 percent from 2011.

Help spread the word about Lyme disease and tick prevention by engaging with these influential people!

Let’s use social media & SXSW influencers to beat back the ticks: Click on the thumbs up, or leave a comment. Simply follow this link, http://bit.ly/TickvsHumansSXSW, sign in, and comment!

Thanks in advance, on behalf of the TickSmart Social Media team, the tireless TickEncounter researchers, and everyone who’s been or will be touched by ticks and may become infected.