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Posts Tagged ‘on-flickr’

Pubcon Day 2 Favorite Photos

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

The second day of WebmasterWorld Pubcon didn’t dissapoint with great sessions throughout the day.  In between sessions, I was able to take a few candids and had help from Lisa Barone and Ashley Bruce during the sessions where I was speaking.

Alex Bennert and Elisabeth Osmeloski
Elisabeth Osmeloski and Alex Bennert

Barry Schwartz and Ken Jurina
Barry Schwartz and Ken Jurina

Jessica Bowman and Heather Lloyd Martin
Jessica Bowman and Heather Lloyd Martin

A taller Matt Cutts and Lee Odden
A taller Matt Cutts and Lee Odden

Lisa Barone and Tamar Weinberg
Lisa Barone and Tamar Weinberg

Andy Beal, Jane Copeland and Mike McDonald
Andy Beal, Jane Copeland and Mike McDonald

Jake Baillie and Eric Enge
Jake Baillie and Eric Enge

Dante Monteverde Website Magazine
Dante Monteverde 

Susan Esparza and Rebecca Kelley
Susan Esparza and Rebecca Kelley

Google Booth
Google Booth

Take a look at all the Pubcon photos from TopRank opn Flickr.

Sponsored By: Learn Social Media Marketing in NYC TopRank & The DMA Partner on 2 Day Social Media Smarts Workshop

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Pubcon Day 1 Favorite Photos

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

As is tradition at Online Marketing Blog, we take quite a few photos at conferences. I’ve never come back from an event thinking that I took too many.  Here are a few photos from day one of the WebmasterWorld Pubcon conference in Las Vegas, which for me, was interrupted by a trip over to the Zappos headquarters where I took a tour. Afternoon sessions were well attended as was the Zappos Tweetup at Hard Rock Cafe. 

Vanessa Zamora, Joe Morin and Melanie Mitchell
Joe (here flanked by Vanessa Zamora and Melanie Mitchell) is always the luckiest guy in the room – especially in Vegas

Michael Dorausch and Reem Abeidoh
Michael Dorausch and Reem Abeidoh

Zac at Zappos
Zack at Zappos Headquarters

Zappos Elvis Style
Zappos, Elvis Style (including music)

Marcus, Bob, Chris, Greg, Neil, Cameron
6 SEOs Can’t be Wrong: Marcus, Bob, Chris, Greg, Neil, Cameron

DSC00967
Dan Perry and Ethan Giffin

Microsoft Smiles!
Microsoft with big smiles and plenty of visibility at Pubcon

Jeff Randall WebmasterWorld
Jeff Randall from WebmasterWorld making sure registration runs smoothly

Jessica and Ashley from TopRank
Jessica and Ashley from TopRank who are blogging Pubcon

Andrew Beckman & Cindy Turrietta
Andrew Beckman & Cindy Turrietta

Brian, Brian, Jordan & Jeremy @Zappos Party
Brian Chappell, Brian Carter, Jordan Kastaler and Jeremy Luebke chumming it up at the Zappos party

Brett Tabke
The Man of Pubcon: Brett Tabke

Check out all of TopRank’s photos on the Pubcon 2008 Flickr set.

Sponsored By: Follow TopRank on Twitter

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Pubcon 2008 Keynote Shawn Rorick of Cirque du Soleil

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

Brett TabkeThe WebmasterWorld Pubcon conference in Las Vegas opened up today with remarks from founder Brett Tabke, who mentioned that only about 30% of the content of this year’s event are dedicated to search marketing. The rest is made up of social media and other related internet marketing topics.  As interests in the industry changes, Pubcon is also evolving.

The opening keynote presentation was done by Shawn Rorick of Cirque du Soleil who talked about the changing media and marketing landscape and how online marketers need to focus on consumers, learn traditional media language and focus not so much on linear marketing but on prioritizing what online marketing tactics make sense in a fragmented web.

Shawn Rorick Cirque du SoleilThe amount of information in the world doubles roughly every 6 months. The speed and availability of information via cloud computing means a sea change for marketers.

The web is getting smarter. Instead of getting search results, we’re getting “recommendations”. The evolution of search is providing innovative ways to discover information.

Online spending today is focused on search, display, rich media and email with largely flat growth for each. Current online media doesn’t account for the massive changes in information expansion and availability.

The future of online media involves: social media search, search, mobile, virtual worlds, widgets, rich media and in-game ads.  In-game and mobile advertising are the fastest growing segments within new media according to eMarketer.   Mobie, social and widgets are changing the long tail.

The last big jump in internet usage was 2001 and 2003. Now those people have had 5-7 years to get familiar and experienced with the web. The maturity of those users should be considered with web marketing.

The recent presidential campaign offers a good example of social media. McCain used video sharing. Obama used video, in-game ads, blogs, mobile, viral marketing.  One viral video effort from MoveOn that benefitted Obama’s campaign and was particularly effective was the CNNBC video that could be customized to any person’s name.

2.9 million U.S. mobile customers received a text message from the Obama campaign, making it the largest mobile campaign to-date.

Old school thinking: Average age of board of directors of major companies is 55+. Once the old school retires, the next generation gets in.

In 1995 the advertising world split between online and offline. Now they’re coming back together due to acquisitions and mergers of old school media and new media. Also, the formats are comparable. For example: telemarketing and mobile marketing or outdoor advertising and in-game advertising.

“Halo Media” encompasses what media fragmentation is all about. Users decide when, where and how they consumer their media. This results in a cluttered environment. Marketers need to figure out where to best place their media for best impact. Traditional web marketing is very linear. A cluttered environment requires marketers to create a circle of presence around the web site/company.

A key question for online marketers is where to spend their time and what media deliver the best impact?  Measurement is critical and not all shiny web 2.0 objects are applicable.  Forget traditional marketing rules.

Online marketers need to get closer to understanding traditional media: formats, metrics, etc. Get involved with new media conferences and interactive marketing groups. Ask lots of questions. Be somewhat transparent about what you’re doing. It will take competitors 6 months to catch up anyway. Always put yourself in the users’ shoes.

In the digital marketing age, web marketers are the trendsetters and opinion leaders.  Marketers need to question, test and define new web media technologies.

Be sure to check back for more blog coverage of WebmasterWorld Pubcon, and you can also find our photos of the conference at TopRank’s Pubcon Photos on Flickr.

Sponsored By: SES Chicago Dec 8-10 Learn search marketing from the pros

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Increase ROI From Marketing Conferences

Monday, November 10th, 2008

Blog World Expo Audience

Now, more than ever, marketing companies and consultants need to get competitive for client dollars and what better way than advancing your knowledge and your network?

There are many options for companies and agencies to train digital marketing teams and to keep tenured employees up to date including conferences such as: this week’s WebmasterWorld Pubcon, Search Engine Strategies, Search Marketing Expo, numerous regional and niche events and an increasing number of web based offerings including SEMPO Institute and the DMA Search Engine Marketing Certification program. I would be remiss not to mention the upcoming “Social Media Smarts” workshop in NYC covering all aspects of social media marketing including a strategy exercise and tips on building a business case for a social media effort in your organization.

Attending conferences is not cheap when you factor the increasing price of travel and hotels as well as pre/post and conference training fees, meals and taxi. Attendees and their companies are paying $2500 – $5000 per person per conference as well as the cost of time away from the office performing billable work. It’s easy to see why webinars are on the increase and why those who are fortunate to attend these events need to get the most out of them.

Great Hall at MIMA Summit The most important thing that conference attendees can do to get the most out of their time at events is to set goals. Managers sending individuals to conferences should be clear about expectations. Company staff should be sure to talk with others within the organization or team that have attended the same or similar events to gain their insight.

Depending on the purpose for attending a conference, goals may vary. Here are some common goals based on the various reasons for attending any kind of marketing conference:

  • Knowledge - How many sessions will you attend and how will you capture the information? Notes, photos, video (where allowed) When meeting new people, discuss the sessions with them. Compare notes with other attendees, it’s a great way to network and to get other opinions. Before the conference, make a grid or a plan for which specific sessions you’ll be attending. Often times, there is not much time between sessions and the difference between getting a good seat and standing room only can be a matter of minutes.
  • Networking - How many qualified prospects, marketing partners, vendors to outsource to and job candidates will you meeting? Each day, tally them up and plan how you will follow up.
  • Content - how will you leverage your conference experience to create new content for your company blog, articles, or process documentation? Set goals for how many you’ll create each day. The content you capture and create can supply a company blog with numerous posts and show clients, staff and prospective clients that you are on top of what’s happening in the industry. At TopRank, our staff are required to publish at least 3 blog posts for each day of conference attended. Set goals for how many blog posts, articles or other types of content will be created each day of the conference. It doesn’t have to be all text, you can take photos of people, and presentation slides. Take videos where allowed.
  • Knowledge transfer - How will you pass on the information youâ’ve acquired to the rest of the team? At TopRank Online Marketing, our staff take the highlights and any specific tactics of use and create presentations which they share with the rest of the TopRank team. Knowing you will be required to present the information you are gaining with the team back at the office helps focus on takeaways and practical interpretations of the new information.
  • Socialize – Where there’s a conference, there’s a party. After hours events are exceptional opportunities for conference attendees to relax, network and share information. Make no mistake, post session networking can be an art form. Make a point to relax and have fun, but be clear about objectives and make a goal of attending a dinner each night of the event if possible. Some dinners are a tradition amongst long time friends, some are sponsored by vendors and some are at hoc events that occur as a result of like minded individuals wanting to continue the day’s discussion.

Social Media Breakfast Minneapolis As you can see, there are many more opportunities to get value from marketing conference participation than keeping up to date with an industry. Pre conference goal setting and planning, well defined processes as well as follow up and post event knowledge sharing can all multiple the value organizations realize by sending employees to educational events.

Not all organizations are positioned to take full advantage of these insights, but through simple analysis, it can become clear pretty quickly how much is being left on the table or to competitors who are sending the same numbers of people and incurring the same costs.

Understand the conference offerings, set goals and make the time to pre-plan conference involvement. Leverage content creation, networking, recruiting, competitive intelligence as well as prospecting opportunities and industry conferences can move pretty quickly from an expense with an uncertain effect to an investment with multiples of return.

Sponsored By: PRSA International Detroit 10/25-28 Preconference Workshop: Search Engine Optimization for News

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PRSA 2008 International Conference Round Up

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Over the weekend, Online Marketing Blog posts as well as my interactions on Twitter took on a decidedly “public relations” flavor with TopRank’s involvement at the 2008 PRSA International conference.  The event is now done and everyone should be back in the swing of things back in the office.

Nicole and Mike from TopRankMarketing.com
This year TopRank had 2 speaking slots (a workshop and a panel) plus Account Manager Mike Yanke and Media Relations Associate Nicole Leach stayed busy attending sessions, keynotes and blogging.

PRSA 2008
The theme of this year’s event was “The Point of Connection” and I think the reference served the interests of attendees well. Social technologies were top of mind for attendees, speakers and the event itself with all the blogging, Twittering and real world networking going on. PR professionals from across the globe converged on Detroit to learn, recognize their peers, conduct business and most of all to connect.

PRSA 2008 Exhibit Hall
The exhibit hall area offered a variety of products and services to choose from and was well laid out and well attended, which was something many exhibitors appreciated.

Downtown Detroit

While I didn’t get to visit much of Detroit outside of Sweet Lorraine’s for the PR Tweetup and Tom’s Oyster Bar for the PR Technology Section dinner, I did have this rather stoic view from my hotel. Many other photos can be found on TopRank’s PRSA 2008 set on Flickr and the official PRSA photo pool.

Here’s a wrap up of the posts Mike and Nicole posted here and over at Media Relations Blog:

Thank you to Mike and Nicole for doing a great job blogging the event – this was definitely a “working” conference.  A big thanks also goes out to PRSA staff Judy Voss and Colleen Seaver from Professional Development, our PRSA clients Ann Caggiano and Richard Specter and PRSA President and COO Bill Murray.

Find other blog posts on sessions offered at PRSA 2008 on the official PRSA blog, ComPRehension.

Sponsored By: Digital Publishing & Advertising DPAC II Next wave of digital content & ads October 27th & 28th NY Marriott Marquis

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Great product

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