My Interview with Restaurant Business Magazine

During BlogWorld Expo 2010, my friends at PepsiCo set up some time for me to sit down with Sam Smith, editor of Restaurant Business magazine and MonkeyDish.com about my restaurant, Caminito Argentinean Steakhouse.

It was a fun, short interview about the issues that the restaurant faced when I jumped in as a partner to help my best friend. We discuss some of the specific actions that we took and how that helped lead us to becoming the #1 steakhouse in the Pioneer Valley.

If you can’t see the video, you can watch it over on PepsiCo’s YouTube channel.


If we managed to peak your interest and you wanted to read more about what we’ve down as a small business to build our community and increase sales at the restaurant using social media, you can find more here and here.

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Realizing the Value of Time

An underlying theme of some of my recent posts have been the value of time. One of the main reasons why meetings are broken are because they take too much time and distract you from what is important. The reason why I was able to say “I love you” to my mom before she passed away was because my friend was a few minutes late picking me up. Both of these examples rely on the difference of a few minutes. If you could regain 15 minutes back from every meeting, you’d save hours per week (or more!) into your schedule. If my friend had been on time to pick me up, I would’ve regretted my last words to my mom.

Have you ever taken the time to break down time and realize how valuable time really is, even down to a millisecond? This Tungle video, produced by my friend Scott Stratten, breaks down time by providing powerful examples that will cause you to look at time in a new light after watching it.

If you can’t view this video, you can watch it over here.

A powerful underlying concept, eh? “Stop wasting time on things you can’t control, and focus on the things you can.”

Now, if I didn’t tell you earlier that the video was created for Tungle or if you didn’t watch the last couple seconds of the video, you would’ve thought it was just a motivational and inspirational video. One of thousands available across the internet.

But, go deeper than that and realize what Tungle and Scott Stratten have done by publishing this video. They have created emotionally compelling content based around the subject of time, the very issue that Tungle helps us to manage.

If you’ve never heard of Tungle, they are:

“…a calendar accelerator that let’s you easily schedule meetings and share with people inside or outside your business, even if you use different calendars. Tungle is not a calendar – it integrates with your current calendar, giving you the flexibility and control to connect, collaborate and get more done.”

Instead of a video about how to use their service, Tungle has created a video that illicit emotion thus causing you to want to share the video with your social graph. Think you’d have the same feeling if it was a video about how great Tungle is and how much time their tool will save you? Probably not.

The 71 videos that Tungle currently has uploaded to their YouTube channel, they have received a total of 83,428 views. Of those 83,000+ views, the above video has 25,132 views or 30% of all views and it has only been live for 2 weeks, as of this writing.

Looking for the underlying lesson here? Find ways to create compelling content that don’t just pimp your product. Tell a story, illicit emotion and give your community a reason to share your content.

Oh, and if you haven’t tried Tungle yet, go try it because not only does the tool rock, they’re team is pretty awesome, too. I f you want some more info about Tungle, I interviewed Tungle’s CEO Marc Gingras earlier this year.

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19 Marketing Experts Share Tips and Insights – Inbound Marketing Summit 2010 Preview

As we get closer to the Inbound Marketing Summit on October 6-7th (you can save 50% off using source code EBOOK50), Mike Volpe of HubSpot and I teamed up to conduct a survey of the speakers. We had a total of 19 speakers respond, including Chris Brogan, David Meerman Scott, Dharmesh Shah, Steve Garfield, Scott Stratten and more. We gathered all of the responses, analyzed all of the data, and have released a free ebook with the results of the research.

We were interested by some of the data including the prediction that social media will drive more business value than SEO by 2013 and that over the next 3 years Google and Facebook will decline in importance while something new (and currently unknown) will emerge as the most important website or service.

Want to see what else these experts had to say? Here is the complete ebook as a presentation. If you want your own copy, you can download it.


What currently drives the most business value for your company? How do you think that will change over the next 3 years?

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The Growth of Demand Discovery

Today David Baeza, the Vice President of pretty much everything marketing-related at Citrix Online (client), stopped by to explain the growth and importance of demand generation, discovery and capture. You can catch up with David on Twitter.

Marketing has changed dramatically since the adoption of social media.  How consumers digest advertising and make buying decisions has forever been altered by the likes of Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare and LinkedIn.

demand

I lead the Demand Generation team at my organization.  However, the teams name, as well as my title, only tell a small fraction of the story.  Demand, or the creation of it, can be broken down into three distinct, yet dependent parts:

Demand Generation

Commonly referred to as Awareness, encompasses traditional media such as Television, Radio, Print, Billboards, and so on.  These are the bullhorns of advertising.  In many cases this is a customer’s first interaction with a brand; consciously or subconsciously.  I read a lot of nonsense in pop media that suggests traditional advertising is dead.  I believe what is dead is the asynchronous nature of advertising.  It is evolving to become bidirectional.  We have social media and the broader social web to thank for the phenomenon.  Considering that the business models of Facebook and Twitter are predominantly ad based, we better hope that advertising isn’t dead.

While many people think they are immune to advertising, it’s simply not the case.  Many companies use traditional media to imprint or introduce a brand to the target market.  The introduction does not mean there is an expectation (in most cases), to buy now!  The advertising is designed to elicit an emotional response in terms of awareness or association with the product or service.  I’m speaking in generalities because there are many different approaches and theories, such as Direct Response marketing, Branded Response, Content Marketing, Branding, etc.  One of the primary objectives of Demand Generation is to have the prospect take their brand impression and move it onto web.  This is the first step toward Demand Discovery.

Demand Discovery

In this phase, an interested consumer would use the web to inquire about the product.  Such as going onto Twitter to ask about peoples experience with the brand, or engaging with the brand directly and asking questions.  They may look on Facebook or LinkedIn for more content and recommendations, or they may search on YouTube for a product demo.  They will also use the social web to seek out brand alternatives to evaluate what type of service or product best fits their needs.  During this phase customers seek out what is commonly referred to as word-of-mouth.  They are asking their friends both online and offline, about what they use and what they prefer.  During the Discovery phase the brand lets go of the conversation and hands it to the community.  Not literally, but figuratively.

This is the true test of the brands health.  If the product and the value proposition don’t delivery, you’re toast.  The brand can’t use the social web to suddenly make an inferior product sound superior.  This is also where happy customers along with not so happy customers do the marketing on behalf of the brand.  They will influence the buying decision more than any form of traditional media.

Let’s use the iPod as an example.  Everyone remembers the TV ad featuring the dancer with white ear phones playing Are You Gonna be My Girl!.  The ad could have promoted speed and ease of use, but it didn’t.  It turned a stale functional music player into a fashion brand.  In turn, it created an impression that this was more than a music player, it was a must have fashion accessory if you want to be one of the cool kids.  Their legions of fans carried the message from that point forward.  This leads to the final phase, which is Demand Capture.

Demand Capture

This is the sale.  Demand Capture, in my view, happens in one of two areas; search (Google, Bing, etc.), and direct traffic to the brand’s web site or retail store.  Frequently a prospective customer will use a search engine to navigate the web.  During this process they will be exposed to a brand via paid advertising (pay-per-click) or they will find the brand in the natural/organic rankings which leads to the web site.  The primary distinction between Discovery versus Capture, is the transaction.  The Demand is effectively captured by a search landing page and/or directly by the website.  The website can also be substituted or in conjunction with a retail outlet.

Admittedly, there is more than a little commingling between Demand Generation, Discovery and Capture.  The Demand sandwich, for lack of a better visual, now has a tasty slice of Discovery sitting in the middle.  The sandwich was bland and predictable, kind of link bologna.  Now it’s full of flavor and stacked high with choices.  I’ll take rich flavor over bland any day.  As a marketer and a consumer, I prefer choice.  I love the transfer of power and the infinite choices a customer has to aid in their buying decision.  This makes for an informed customer.

An informed customer has a higher lifetime value and is likely to become an advocate of the brand on the social web.  Another benefit is transparency.  The brand promise is clear, thus discouraging detractors or those that are not right for the product or service.  If you can prevent detractors from purchasing your product in the first place, better for them, better for your brand.

Marketing’s success does not hinge on traditional media.  The price of entry is a stellar product and an amazing customer experience.  If you have a small budget and a big dream, spend all your waking hours making it a reality.  Talk about your progress, what your creating, create a community of believers.  Those believers will turn into customers, customers become fans, fans become your marketing engine.

This is my view.  What’s yours?

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Not Responding to Alarms

tunglemeEarly yesterday morning while walking my dog, Sasha, I noticed a vehicle in my parking lot had been vandalized.  The car was sitting on two slowly buckling milk crates and it was missing all four of its wheels.  As I walked past that vehicle I realized that another vehicle beside it had one of its windows smashed.  I called out management offices as I was heading into the office to alert them and get the police en route.

Towards the end of the day I ended up running into the property manager and inquired as to what he suspected happened and whether or not there had been other problems reported on the property.  He told that me that it appeared to be targeted to the main vehicle because it had expensive tires and rims.  I was surprised that my wife or I hadn’t woken up during the night when the vehicle’s alarm, presumably, went off while the car was being jacked up and the tires were being stolen.  The property manager explained that the resident reported hearing his alarm go off but had just silenced it from his apartment figuring that it had been accidentally tripped by weather or an animal.  Had he actually looked to see why the alarm was going off, it is possible that he could’ve interrupted the crime.

Besides ensuring that there was nothing left in my vehicles that could attract criminals, I began thinking about how oblivious we are to car alarms nowadays.  We have become so accustomed to hearing alarms buzzing that many times we won’t even glance in the direction of the alarm while walking through a parking lot.  Have you ever done that?  I know I sure have.  Now, related that to your marketing program.  Are you ignoring the alarms going off all around you?  Do you even realize that alarms may be sounding crying for your attention?

Identifying the Alarms

Being able to identify the alarm and knowing what you need to be listening for is the first step.  What types of alarms should you be aware of?  They can come in a variety of formats but some of them may include:

  • Declining responses to a marketing campaign
  • An increase in spam complaints
  • Continued lack of engagement from your community
  • A decline in RSS or email subscribers to your blog
  • A lack of growth in followers, fans, or subscribers

These are just a few of the many alarms that could be sounding that you continue to hit the silence button on.  Your alarms may be different than those that I have listed.  Exactly what the alarms are really doesn’t matter.  What matters is that you identify them so that you can properly respond to them before it’s too late.

Responding to the Alarms

So, you’ve identified the alarm, now what?  You should develop both a strategic and tactical plan to address the issue and respond to it.  The level of the response will be dictated on what the alarm actually is and based on how long you might’ve ignored it.  Much like a progressive disease, the longer it goes untreated, the harder it may be to correct.  What are some ways you can respond to the alarm(s)?

  • Switch up the day and time you send your email marketing
  • Review your site analytics over a period of time. Identify where the decline began or where it started to level off.  What were you doing (or not doing) during that time?
  • Did you recently update your blog and forget to add the “Subscribe” button back?  Yep, I’ve done that before.
  • Have you ever analyzed what type of content you produce?  Is it one-way push? Are you promoting others? Do you only retweet others work?

What’s Next

The next steps are to continue monitoring the changes you have implemented and track whether or not they’ve been successful.  Always monitor, evaluate, experiment and adapt.  This will ensure that you’re staying alerted to alarms before it becomes too late.  Much like the resident who lost all four of their tires, when you realize that you shouldn’t have hit the silence button, it may be too late.  Worse case scenario is that you’re so blind to the alarms that you slowly bleed your entire community or customers and have nothing left.  Just a hint: try to avoid that from happening.  It’s usually not healthy for your business.

Do you silence the alarms going on around you?

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Photo Credit: wallyg