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The Cold Shoulder of Social Media with Green Marketing

Why it hasn’t worked for me, and I wonder how it works for you?

Today I’m telling my story at Social Media Arizona. It’s about my early efforts, struggles, and successes with social media strategy for sustainability and green marketing. I’m not whining. I’m learning. This is my right of passage in social media, and I welcome any advice you might have.

I’ve chosen to structure my story as a screenwriter would in pitching a Hollywood producer a movie. This structure comes from Blake Snyder in his screenwriting book, “Save the Cat!” I’ve found you can use his concept of 15 story beats in every great tale for just about anything you want to communicate powerfully.

So grab a cup of coffee, and put your feet up, because I’ve got a doozy for you.

The logline to my story – that one sentence that answers the question, “What is it?” – reads:

In a bid to survive the devastating economy, an optimistic businessman first has to overcome the unrequited love of his new marketing darling – online social media – before his muse will save him.

Opening Image: (Cutout of my head with eyes dreamily peering upward at all the social media logos in a thought cloud; like visions of sugar plumbs dancing in my head. Then the “caching” of dollar signs replace my eyeballs.)

Theme Stated: How you tell your story is more important than where you tell it. (The logos in the above image are replaced with the line, “Once upon a time…” and my face turns to puzzlement as the dollar signs drop from my eyes in a crash.)

The Set-up: Park Howell runs Park&Co, a growing Phoenix agency with a growing client list. In fact, the firm is celebrating its 15th year in business on March 1. Park’s pretty proud of his team and what they’ve built. He owns his own building, works with 16 wonderful employees, and he and his interior designer wife, Michele, have three lovely kids, each a creative entrepreneur in their own ways. Park&Co is right on track to take over the world. Always fearful of becoming a dinosaur, Park and the agency embraces social media early and begins successfully using elements of it for their clients.

  • The agency used iTunes to help its client distribute its training videos worldwide, saving the company more than $250,000 in its first year of the program.
  • Park&Co has have given rural Arizonans a voice in Washington D.C. by capturing their stories of needing jobs and broadcasting them through YouTube.
  • He has created Ning networks to gather people online for Goodwill and Water Conservation causes

Catalyst, or “Inciting Incident”: Then “Bam!” In October 2008, the world ends as he knew it with the beginning of the global recession. (Picture of ship sailing off the edge of a “flat” world.) The “New normal” was dawning. It was not enough for Park to help his clients weather the storm with decreasing marketing resources. He had to insure the survival of his own agency. Park followed the lead of many captains in the industry, and they all pointed to online social media as more than a temporary lifeboat, but the new marketing world order.

Debate: But can he pull it off? What will it take? Does he launch his own blog or amp up the agency’s online presence? What is his story, his niche, his expertise? Which social media tools, proven or not, will he employ? How will he measure it? What will he measure? What matters? Who cares?

Break into Two (Act 2, the “Love Story”):  Following a Vegas ad agency seminar, and biz dev. gurus introducing Park to the sultry and sensational attributes of online social media, Park falls head-over-heels. He develops his own blog, “A Brighter Shade of Green Marketing,” that focuses on one of the agency’s successful niches: Sustainability.

He takes time to listen to his potential audiences with his new accounts on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, FriendFeed. He monitors Digg, StumbleUpon, Technorati. He hosts online polls and posts videos. He participates in webinars, creates a Ning network, and reads social media romance novels like Bernoff’s “Groundswell,” Brogan’s “Trust Agents,” Baer’s “Convince & Convert” blog, and a plethora of novelettes in the form of free eBooks and SlideShare presentations.

Everyone’s a social media expert and he wants to be invited to the dance. He is delighted and surprised when he is asked to speak about social media in a niche within his niche: Water conservation. He researches, and writes, and posts lists, and links, and insights. He comments on other blogs, reaches out to sustainability writers, and Tweets about everything but where he’s having coffee.

Midpoint: Park finds himself in a feverish, but seemingly one-sided courtship with social media. He’s ready to round third base and head for home.  Readers are going to come flooding in. The phone is going to ring off the hook. One person cautions him,

“How are you going to keep this up – working four to six hours per day on social media – when you’re going to be so busy handling all of the new business?”

Great question, he thinks. Then, in a figurative gesture, he puts his hand to his ear, leans forward toward the very computer he’s been banging away at for 10 solid months, and stops for a moment to hear what his effort has earned him in the way of new business.

Click to hear crickets.

Bad Guys Close In: As Park’s doubts about his social media abilities grow, and its relevance as the new marketing beloved, the economy worsens. Not ready to abandon his initial romance, even though her delicate hand seems just out of reach in the way of biz dev reciprocity, he has to reinvent how his agency can remain sustainable in this new environment of more project work, less campaigns, and dwindling budgets.

All is Lost: Park travels East to meet with other agencies for a two-day session on “Best practices.” The more they talk of scheduling tweets, publishing lists because people don’t read but scan, how bloggers game the AdAge Power150, the more Park finds himself repelling from the process.

Dark Night of the Soul: Park returns to Phoenix more confused than ever about his wooing of social media and the unrequited love he has received in the form of zero new business.

Break into Three: With the help of his brilliant team back at the agency, and what he’s learned from the accumulated months of research while pursuing his social media muse, Park arrives at the greatest truth of all:

It’s not where you tell your story, but how well you tell it.

She doesn’t want you to simply show up with flowers. She wants you to freely share your heart and soul. Only then will she give back.

Finale: Park realizes that behind the siren song of online social media lays many virtues that aren’t at first apparent. Online social media loves you back by:

  • Making you a better listener
  • Honing your writing skills
  • Recognizing and capitalizing on trends
  • Developing ones self as a more skilled online communicator/marketer
  • Building expertise in your chosen niche outside of social media
  • Employing your new found knowledge to guide your customers
  • Creating more enlightenment to innovation with easy access to thought leaders
  • Exercising resiliency and self-discipline in your daily development
  • Perfecting presentation abilities
  • Enhancing your own leadership skills

And most of all, social media helps you become a better storyteller.

Tomorrow, I will tell Part II of my story. I will share with you compelling stories being told offline and on that make it easy for people to share. These are stories that in many ways are changing the world. And they all have one thing in common…

Everything I Know About Social Media I Learned in Kindergarten

What story can you tell about this cat, kid and goldfish?

What story can you tell about this cat, kid and goldfish?

I’ve been at this social media thing for two years now. Just moving into the first grade. Yes, I had to repeat SM kindergarten. I find it’s as finicky as a five-year-old.

The “experts” through their blogs, ebooks and Slideshares, have been trying to teach me the trending. The numbers. Why you’re supposed to have a gajillion followers on Twitter or you’re not cool on the playground. How to game the AdAge 150 ranking. What I’m supposed to be posting on Facebook. How I should be scheduling tweets.  FYI, SEO aids ROI. My Technorati training wheels keep falling off. I find StumbleUpon aptly named.  Digg this! “Aaaah the madness!” I cried.

For a media that’s supposed to be about “The conversation,” all I hear about are “The Numbers.” But the numbers tend to belie the conversational strength of social media. These particular stats are from “Groundswell”:

Only 18% of people online actually create anything to share, while 25% of those online are “Critics,” meaning they actually comment on the “Creators” work.  The groups overlap, so a lot of those critics are also the creators. What’s it all mean to the “Sister Mary John” school boy inside me? There not a hell of a lot of “Conversations” going on out there. Most internet denizens are more comfortable being wallflowers as they peruse from the shadows. Is that why the numbers are so dam important (Sorry Sister)? That’s called a “Broadcast” medium, not one that is actively engaged in conversation.

People Don’t Read, They Scan.

That’s bull-hockey. They don’t read because very few of us have something decent to say. Or say it very interestingly. Including, apparently, me. My “numbers” are in the tank.

Until now.

I’m going back to what all kids, including those inside of us, like: Stories!

The moral of this post moving forward is: “Stories sell.”

You want to be sustainable? Tell better stories.

I’m leaving the “How to’s,” and “The 10 Reasons Why,” and the “Lists” and the abbreviated text to the engineers and the PowerPointers. That’s all low resolution storytelling, and it’s no longer for me.

I’m not interested in folks strafing my blog anymore. There’s little interaction and no engagement. It’s not worth my time, or yours.

Instead, I’m going back to what I do best: Telling better stories. And I’m pulling from a whole new set of experts, including Steven Pressfield and his remarkable book, “The War of Art.” His “Writing Wednesdays” tip is a terrific inspiration for storytellers.

Did you know you can overlay the structure of a screen play onto everything from a Cardinal’s football game to a compelling sermon? I’ve learned this by studying Blake Snyder’s screen play bible, “Save the Cat.” Now I’m into his “Save the Cat Goes to the Movies,” where Snyder, adding credence to his structural thesis, outlines the  “Beat Sheet” for 50 influential movies, with another 50 films referenced throughout the book.

Just finishing David Mamet’s, “Three Uses of the Knife: On the Nature and Purpose of Drama”.

Up next: Seth Godin’s, “All Marketers Tell Stories,” while studying über screenwriting professor, Robert Kckee’s, “Story,” on the substance, structure, style, and the principles of telling better stories.

And finally, I’m going to share with you the intriguing work of Dr. Sam Ham (Yah, I know, a name right out of Dr. Seuss) and his moving work in “Thematic Communication” in environmental marketing and sustainability.

Why the bibliography? To underscore to you that I’m furiously serious. Stories can intrigue, incite, educate and move people. I’ve known that all my life. Just Google, “I’ll raise your a rabbit,” and you’ll see what I mean. But, like the “Apple in the Road” plot twist in a “Golden Fleece” movie genre as described by Snyder, somehow, in all the glitz and glamor of social media and its ROI and numbers, and scanning, and brevity, we have lost site of the power of telling a great story.

When was the last time you heard a good joke? I bet it’s been awhile. Email has killed the craft of joke telling. It’s not what you’re telling, it’s how you tell it. Email takes the human dimension out of a great set-up and punchline. And if we’re not careful, the pruned back, PowerPoint ideology of blog writing is going to kill the story. At least the online version of storytelling.

But where there’s conflict, there’s opportunity. Plate tectonics create both earthquakes and mountain ranges.

I’m going to be telling my story, “The Cold Shoulder of Social Media: Why it hasn’t worked for me, and probably won’t for you, unless… at the Social Media Arizona conference SMAZ on January 25 at the Mad Cap Theaters in Tempe.

And get this: Fred Von Graf, SMAZ’s producer, has even included me  as an “Expert.” I’m proud and honored to be listed with the likes of Jason Baer of Convince and Convert, and Greg Chapman of Sitewire. They’re the real experts that know how to operationalize social media, and they both have their own great stories to tell.

Mine is about what has – and more importantly, what has not – worked for me using social media. And I can tell you, whether you’re communicating online or off, it ALL begins with how well you tell a tale.

What’s your story?