Meet Jeanne Hurlbert, my new (and unlikely) business partner

Jeanne HurlbertIf you asked me to describe my ideal business partner, never in a million years would I envision someone with a PhD in sociology.

Such degrees, I always believed, are expensive pieces of paper printed by the diploma factories otherwise known as universities. They seldom lead to “real world” jobs outside of academia.

I certainly wouldn’t want a Phi Beta Kappa tagging along with me. Such a highfalutin academic would be horrified to hear that I flunked five college courses and almost didn’t graduate because I was three credits short of a diploma just six weeks before graduation.

Meet Jeanne Hurlbert, a PhD sociologist at Louisiana State University, survey expert and Phi Beta Kappa, who was studying social networks long before Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg was born. When I heard her on a teleseminar in January this year, I was hooked less than 10 minutes into the call. I emailed the teleseminar host immediately and gushed, “This woman is brilliant! Where did you find her?”

Jeanne (pronounced Jeanie) was the guest expert, and she was explaining the importance of using customer profile surveys to gather scientific data about what our customers want. Don’t make false assumptions about products to create or services to offer, she cautioned, based on discussions you’re having at social media sites.  False assumptions can derail your business.

Her message hit home.

For a few years, I’d been wondering where to take my business ever since newspapers started marching toward the graveyard. Traditional media has far less influence now than it did 20 years ago for any Publicity Hound who’s self-promoting.

Two days after the teleseminar, I hired Jeanne as a consultant to help me create a customer profile survey. She suggested questions I never would have thought of asking, and she devised a clever way to generate customer testimonials for my website and product pages.

In March, when I was called to Ohio for a funeral for three days, right in the middle of the survey, she kept all the plates spinning, personally attending to dozens of customer service problems we encountered when the technology “hiccuped” and many of the respondents had trouble accessing the survey.


Social media: The bridge to a partnership

The results of Jeanne’s survey were like the footbridge to our partnership.

Many of the respondents admitted that they were completely confused—and sometimes terrified—by social media.  Jeanne and I talked about how we were, too, when we started creating profiles at the social media sites and how it’s still often overwhelming.

I confessed to her two of my big social media sins:

  • Blatant promotion without knowing any better
      
  • Being too embarrassed to ask about things I didn’t understand. Here’s a good example. When you go to a blog, why is there sometimes a big cluster of words in a box, and some of the words are bigger than other words? Sometimes, the words don’t even appear to be related. I eventually learned that that’s called a tag cloud. It’s a visual representation of topics discussed at the blog.  The bigger the words, the more often they’re discussed.    

Then she came clean with me:

  • She thought social media was a flash in the pan and only for kids. 
      
  • When she started participating, she assumed it would be a fairly easy ride because she’d been studying social networks for years and, after all, she had that PhD.  But she eventually learned that she was lost.

That’s when I knew we weren’t so different after all.

One conversation led to another. She interpreted my survey results and suggested new products and services I could offer my customers. The survey led to a shift in my business, with far greater emphasis on online publicity and social media.

Then, in May, Jeanne suggested we start a business.

She already had the technology in place to create a detailed questionnaire on any topic and return to the respondent a customized report  based on the answers. She called it an assessment, and suggested that the logical topic was social media and how people should use it for business.

We could combine her technology and knowledge of social networking with my more than 10 years teaching people how to self-promote. The results would be a customized “here’s what to do” report that removes the fear for anyone struggling with social media and gives them hundreds of solid suggestions on how to map out a social media strategy and stay on track.

If I had something like that in my hands when I started blogging several years ago, I reasoned, I could have shaved years off my learning curve. I jumped at the chance to join her, and we formed My Social Media Solution, LLC. It’s the perfect complement to my regular business, The Publicity Hound, and my weekly ezine, which will still be going strong.


Social Media Rx: Just What the Doc Ordered

Cover for Social Media RxIn a few weeks, we’ll introduce you to “Social Media Rx: Your 20-Minute Prescription for Cutting through the Clutter, Chatter and Confusion.”

After completing a 20-minute questionnaire, each respondent receives a customized report along with a formula that suggests exactly which topics they should be discussing at social media sites, and how often, based on their job and career, hobbies, interests, family, areas of expertise, and other factors. No two reports are identical. We’ve even applied for a patent to protect the process we used to create this product.

Your report comes with six checklists that detail which tasks you should complete daily, weekly and monthly at  social media sites. The checklists even show you which of those tasks you can delegate if you’re lucky enough to have an assistant, and which you should do yourself, like writing your own blog posts.

More about this in a few weeks.


And She Loves Dogs!

Jeanne teaches spin classes at 5:30 a.m. She scuba dives. She loves spending time with her husband, Jack, and their 8-year-old daughter, Elizabeth. And she has two dogs.

We’ve never met in person. But it seems like Neily, her Corgi, and CB, her rescue long-haired Chihuahua, are on a first-name basis with Bogie, my German Short-Haired Pointer, and Tracker, my Weimaraner, because they all bark at each other while we’re talking on the phone.

Jeanne and I often coordinate our schedules while walking the dogs, feeding the dogs, yelling at the dogs, dispensing treats, wiping muddy paws, shoveling dog food into bowls, and corralling them into their crates at night.

More than a few times, the daily walks for her two boys and my two girls have had to wait.

Social Media Rx has been more than eight months of back-breaking work and, often, frustration, particularly when it comes to technology. We’re excited to finally introduce you to it.

And when we do, Neily, CB, Bogie and Tracker will be happy to have us back again.

Social media time-saver: Turn a LinkedIn Q&A into a video

Stop spending precious time creating original content for all your social media sites. 
             
Here’s a valuable shortcut—a quick way to use expertise you’ve already shared with somebody, and turn it into a video.  
    
Several months ago, on LinkedIn, I answered a question about all the ways an author could use Twitter to promote a book. I copied and pasted my bulleted list and turned it into a post for this blog: Social networking ROI: A testimonial more valuable than an ad.
           
Then I took that list, pared it down, and bought some stock photos. I combined the photos with text to create a video, using Animoto, a program I love that turns your still photos and text into slick videos. I’ve written about Animoto here.
      
Here’s my Animoto video on how to use Twitter to market your book:
     


Next, I’ll take the video and post it to my YouTube channel. Then I’ll share it with my Facebook Fans. Failing to create Fan Pages on Facebook, by the way, is a major missed opportunity, because Fan Pages are the only place Facebook allows you to promote. You can also have an unlimited number of Fans. Read about other missed opportunities on Facebook

And then I’ll tweet about it, leading my Twitter followers to this blog.

There are countless other ways to recycle content, but you get the idea.  If you’re writing a string of tweets about a particular topic, can they be turned into article for EzineArticles.com? Can that article then be turned into a video?

When you find yourself creating content for social media sites, stop and ask yourself: How many ways you can milk the cow that’s already in the barn?  





Use social networking to market your product, service 10 ways

eriches20-2Thousands of people who are being downsized, right-sized and capsized during this bad economy aren’t waiting around for a job offer. They’re looking to the Web for their next career—and maybe even riches.

Enter e-Riches 2.0–Next-Generation Marketing Strategies for Making Millions Online, a new book by Internet success coach Scott Fox.

If you’re one of the victims of this economy and you want to start selling online, or you’re new to Internet marketing, you can learn all about the basics of what it takes to create a successful business online. If you’ve been selling online for several years, the book will bring you up to speed quickly on how to add social media to your marketing mix.

Here are Scott’s 10 recommendations on how to use social networking as a marketing tool.

  1. Invite a half-dozen or more friends to get your network started. Practice using the tools of the social network to communicate with them. For example, you can “add” friends on MySpace, “poke” or “write on the walls” of Facebook connections, or respond to some questions in the LinkedIn “Answers” section. (See Social networking ROI: A testimonial more valuable than an ad.)
               
  2. Start engaging, publishing, and interacting. Get to know some people—that’s  why you’re here.
        
  3. Be authentic. A big part of being authentic is letting the “real you” out to play. Nobody wants to play with a “suit,” so don’t be afraid to be yourself (within professional and legal limits, of course). Mixing the personal and business sides of your life is more common than it used to be.
        
  4. Only try to connect with others with whom you really do have common ground. Indiscriminate friend requests are “friend spam.” They are  no more appreciated than email spam or junk mail in the real world. (And if people you don’t know starting linking with you, your own network will soon be less valuable, too.)
                 
  5. Ask for help. Most social network users are online to be social, and most are happy to help by sharing their knowledge about how the systems work.
               
  6. Use feeds to keep up with your friends’ activities and broadcast your own. Posting your own status constantly and cleverly is a great distributed engagement marketing tactic. This is one of the “missed opportunities” I discussed during the teleseminar I hosted this month on 11 Ways to Avoid Missed Opportunities on Facebook
       
  7. If you have a blog, feed its posts into your profile page. This will automatically help keep your pages fresh and share your writings with a new audience, too.
       
  8. Join some groups—learn the lingo and the tools of the network by using them and observing how others use them, too. Joining groups will also begin to create a natural dialogue with other users that will grow over time.
       
  9. Be a good and involved citizen in those groups to cultivate new friends. There’s no better way to gain the respect of any community than adding value by sharing info, support, or companionship—and these tools will amplify the effect. If you are an expert, social networks are a great way to spread your reputation cloud for that expertise.
      
  10. Create your own group. Once you are comfortable, start a group around your product or brand. Position yourself as an expert resource and offer to help and facilitate community. Members usually proudly display the names of the groups to which they belong on their profile pages. This can lead to lots more clicks (and members) as others see your group’s name or logo on friends’ pages and in their feeds.

Scott’s book includes more than a dozen examples  of real-life Internet marketing success stories, from a North Carolina furniture store that profitably captures high-end customers using pay-per-click search engine text ads on Google, Yahoo! andMSN (Chapter 21), to the article syndication strategy that has helped a Christian stay-at-home mom to attract lots of profitable traffic for her blog (Chapter 16).

The book  is $25 and published by AMACOM, the American Management Association.

Job-hunter offers $6,000 finder’s fee on LinkedIn

beverlyshepardonlinkedin

If you’re unemployed and desperate, it’s time to muster a little creativity, stage a kick-butt publicity stunt, and call on your LinkedIn connections to help land the perfect job.

Enter Beverly Shepard, who has been job-hunting for 16 months and jobless since January when The Virginia-Pilot newspaper eliminated her job as marketing manager and her entire department.

Here’s her offer: Find her a job and you could win up to $6,000.

That’s what she paid a professional search firm when she started job hunting. But the company failed to generate even one interview.

“I’ve paid strangers,” she said. “Why not pay my friends?”

On March 15, she emailed her more than 200 connections on LinkedIn with the offer. The fee is based on a percentage of the salary for the job Beverly accepts.

A $120,000 job pays 5 percent, or $6,000. An $80,000-a-year job pays 1 percent, or $800. She has placed several conditions on the offer. It applies only to full-time positions (40 hours with benefits) and she must actually accept and start work on the job.

She’s willing to move anywhere in the U.S. and she’s open to a wide range of jobs in marketing, business development or public relations.

LinkedIn email pays off

Within 15 minutes of emailing her LinkedIn connections, the leads started pouring in. When her friend, Publicity Hound Gail Kent of The Buzz Factory, heard about what she was doing, Gail offered to write a press release. That led to an avalanche of publicity.

The ABC affiliate in nearby Norfolk called for an interview. That sparked more publicity from FastCompany.com, BlogTalkRadio, TheEbonyNetwork.com and BlackAmericans.com. A friend who’s a college student posted the Norfolk TV interview on iReport.com, the citizen journalist website for CNN. The biggest media hit was an interview on CNN network news April 18.

“I’ve gotten so many leads, I’ve stopped counting,” Beverly says. “I’ve even heard from an old boyfriend who said he’ll keep his eyes open for jobs for me.”

So far, she’s had one job interview as a result of the “Woman for Hire, Will Pay for Work” campaign, and another interview later this month.

She has even heard from Kathryn Troutman, The Federal Resume Guru.

“Kathryn heard about my campaign, emailed me and said she’ll keep me in mind,” Beverly said.

LinkedIn, it turns out, is a super tool for job-hunters.  Scott Allen, a LinkedIn expert who I interviewed last year during a teleseminar on How to Promote Anything on LinkedIn—Ethically & Powerfully, said connections are usually willing to help you promote something, even yourself, as long as they know you’re sincere and that you don’t abuse your relationship with them.
More about Beverly Shepard

Interested in promoting or hiring her? You might want to know:

  • She has also worked for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and Cox Enterprises, Inc.
  • She’s the vice president of marketing for the American Marketing Association for the Norfolk, Va. area and the former president of the Atlanta Association of Black Journalists.
  • She’s an award-winning marketer with 20 years in newspapers, and degrees in journalism and law from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

Email her with leads.You can also find her on Facebook. Find her a job, and you’re in the money.