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Tools to Drive Your Social Media Editorial Calendar by Designated Editor

Driving and Planning Your Social Media Editorial Calendar

Do you find Social Media overwhelming … and making you crazy?

Designated Editor’s Suzanne McDonald shared sanity-saving tools to engage and increase social media effectiveness with the Yankee International Association of Business Communicators in Greater Boston last night. Here are a few highlights.

Social Media challenges we’ll address

  • What should an editorial calendar look like?
  • How to discover influencers?
  • How to be more efficient?
  • How to measure and boost ROI?
  • How to integrate across platforms?

 

4 elements of social media planning

Stage 1 Your audience & influencers

Stage 2 Find & leverage the right tools

Stage 3 Integrate social media channels

Stage 4 Social media optimization & metrics

Tools

HubSpot, Compendium, WordPress Editorial Calendar plugin

 

Stage 1 Audience & influencers

  • Who might be your best advocates?
  • What are their defining characteristics?
  • What are they looking for?
  • Are you using the right vocabulary?

Tools

Google Trends, Google Alerts, Google Keyword Tool

Influencer detection tools

Wildfire leaderboard, Technorati blog tool, Twiangulate, Klout Twitter plugin

 

Stage 2 Use the right strategic tools

  • Editorial calendars
  • Blogs: Yours and others’
  • Email newsletters
  • Search marketing best practices

Tools

 Samepoint, OMGili, Icerocket, Cision EdCals

 

Stage 3 Integrate social media channels

  • Claim social profiles: Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Quora, SlideShare, Pinterest, Google+ etc.
  • Determine most relevant social channels
  • Monitor, engage & integrate
  • Sentiment analysis
  • Weave your content across platforms

Tools

Whathashtag, Twitalyzer, Twilert, Twitrratr

 

Stage 4 Social media optimization & metrics

  • Be more efficient
  • Be more effective
  • Optimize for performance
  • Calculate your ROI

Tools

Hootsuite, Google Analytics, Facebook Insights, bit.ly, Twittercounter, SproutSocial

 

Many thanks to Yankee International Association of Business Communicators President Linda Sanders for the opportunity to share these insights.

Looking for a speaker for your event or organization? Check out myriad new media topics Suzanne McDonald has presented.

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Content Is Required for Sites Seeking Link Love

Link Love Boston: When you seek links, you’ll need quality content

Link Love Boston 2012 Zwickerhill Photography

Link Love Boston 2012 courtesy of David Zwickerhill Photography

A few talks into the Link Love Boston conference, someone tweeted: “Link Love? More like Content Love.”

Bottom line from Link Love: Invest in content; links are are not what they once were in the SEO realm. Social is where it’s at. And what makes something share-worthy?

Link Love Boston aligned a small galaxy of search marketing superstars, best of all in little ‘ol Boston. Normally, you’d have to trek to New York or San Francisco.

The best part of the day? A single track of presentations. No running across campuses or wondering which presenter will be asleep at the podium.

Highlights from Link Love Boston, featuring Rand Fishkin, Wil Reynolds, Tom Critchlow, and more show links require quality content + social media.

 

In the SEO battle, CONTENT reigns as king

  • Storytelling, belief, trust is what makes us buy. Create content with those aspects!
  • You don’t have to limit your content to your work: find what your audience cares about and build community.
    • Tell stories that mean something to your audience, i.e. create cool stuff and they will come.
  • The value of a link isn’t based on cost to acquire it.
    • Content wins long-term. You pay upfront rather than paying each month: Google increasingly devaluing links.
    • Content will continue to win sooner, as Google places greater emphasis. How soon until we’re all swimming in content?
  • Negative ROI to start, but content always wins over paid links, and it always wins earlier.
  • Rather than remove links, need to ensure you have lots of quality to balance out your profile.

Best practices with links

  • Quantity quotas diminish quality; this applies to links like everything else.
  • We always think in volume. But really, it doesn’t matter how much traffic you get if it converts terribly.
  • Marketing needs to be holistic and integrated, rather than myopic link-network. Google may catch up to you.
  • Cramming your title tag with keywords is bad practice.
  • If it looks spammy ultimately cuts down traffic.

Create a content team

  • 20 people creating content, 5 people on outreach, 10 people doing design/development.
  • Create a new position: A chief content officer can turbocharge results.  She will focus on strategy and make the inflection point happen.
  • Make the blogger into a permanent position: It is an important part of branding agenda.

Tactics for creating content-rich links

  • Help people get more traffic if they deserve it.
  • Find related articles, develop infographics. Reach out to original source & everyone who shared and interacted.
  • Rich links help to enhance search engine optimization.
  • SEO is half assignment-editing, half circulation.
  • SEOs look more like the leaders in digital publishing every day.
  • Treat the meta-description like it’s a sales copy: capitalize words, include phone numbers, etc.
  • For niche B2B: focus on building thought leadership and experts, PR outreach.
  • Don’t cram keywords into titles, make them read like headlines and make sense.

Links tools to consider using on a tight budget

Rethink the way you produce content for Pinterest

  • If planned correctly, Pinterest can drive over 100,000 visitors to your site.
  • What Pinterest wants: great ideas to guide through life, steps and guides.
  • Infographics don’t work as well on Pinterest.
    • Instructographics for Pinterest must be at least 500 pixels wide and max 5,000 pixels long.
    • Ideal graphic size for Pinterest 500 pixels wide by 2,500 long, want them to click through to your site.
  • Best time to “Pin It” – 5 AM & 5PM EST.
  • If you’re a business, pin IDEAS not products to Pinterest.
  • Create attractive images for Pinterest and post to your blog, pin the image to your page.
  • Make sure your text is small enough Pinterest visitors have to go to your site to really experience your pin.

These are simply a sampling of Link Love gems. Watch to know more? Check out the Link Love videos. And don’t miss Search Love San Francisco 2012.

 

Special thanks to @josephschaefer@fairminder@randfish@BigGuyD@timothyjjensen@dohertyjf@sarahbethgo@shawnccpr@sicodeandres@bankonjustin@seomoz@foliovision@JustinMattison@colbyalmond,  for their insights!

 

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