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But now "Adrianne Machina" returns almost 2000 search results thanks largely to social media sites. Right after my own company website - TornadoMktg.com, I see BusinessWeek.com, Amazon.com, LinkedIn.com, Facebook.com, Twitter.com and MeetUp.com.
My cousin and a long-lost college friend both found me easily - thanks to social media!
Adrianne Machina
Duct Tape Marketing Coach
So far so good ;)
And when I search for my name? Well it's rather more common than yours, but four of the entries on Page 1 are me and in the UK version of Google, I'm No.1 - whoopee...!
Your Name:
People will search for you by name to learn more about you and evaluate your credibility. The more you appear, the better you look.
Your Products & Services:
If your profiles are structured to make your name synonymous with the products and services you offer, then searches for the products and services that you offer will yield more, and better, results that include your name.
Matt
However I think the impact is more significant when the name/person is the main business brand. I don't think that the president of a large corporation is as closely tied to his/her business as the president of a small/medium size business.
That is, John's name is out there (on the social media sites) along with his website and that connection is tight and far reaching. I don't see (or even know who it is) the president of Coca Cola, or Nike, or Starbucks - big companies with big reputations - with big social media presence.
I guess, if you want to own anything in the world, it should be your name?
Great Post, and I agree with your other readers and their comments that it is really important. Google and the other search engines are the new yellow pages, the new phone book. If you aren't coming up on page one with lots of content, you are lost in the shuffle.
In my most recent blog post my advice is this: just pick one site and create an account. You don't have to be on every site yesterday... you just need to get out there and do one at a time to start helping you promote your small business.
Start by getting listed on the sites that your competitors and potential clients are using. For instance, I still haven't set up a myspace page, but I'm on LinkedIn, Squidoo, Facebook, etc. because those are more valuable to me at this time. Down the road I'll add the others.
Jared Young
The Original Quill
If you're not in control of at least some of the content about you online, someone else is in control of all of it.
I have seen many marketers fail on social networking sites because they didn't respect their "friends" and tried to use direct marketing in comments. People view that as spam and will simply remove you from their friends list. Worse, the social networking site will ban your account.
For example, using comments to link to a squeeze page is a bad idea. Instead use comments to actually talk TO your list. When you want to pitch a product to your list, do it indirectly. A highly effective strategy is to post a YouTube video and in the description of your YouTube video on YouTube, link to your blog or a post within your blog. Then, on your blog, make the sales pitch. When you comment to your friends, you use something like, "Hi [name]. I just posted this video on YouTube that I thought you might find interesting. Not sure if you are into conspiracy theories, but if you are, check it out. If you have time comment me back, thanks."
Make it a point to spend 10 minutes after each mass comment campaign you do to give personal responses to the comments people leave for you. Remember, respect your "friends". If someone makes a comment about your video, show them respect by giving a personal reply back.
It is helpful to think of social network profiles in terms of marketing in the context of the famous marketer over 100 years ago who offered a free ferry ride across a river every Tuesday. People were amazed and asked the business owner how he made money by doing this? He kept it a secret. After he made a lot of money at doing this, he told everyone how he did it. He said, "You see the two restraunts on the island over there? The owners were about ready to close their businesses down due to lack of customers. They agreed to pay me 20% of every sale they get on Tuesday. While I loose money on the ferry ride across the river, I make money on the backend by the commissions I get from the two restraunts on the island."
Social network marketing is a lot like this. You don't want the social network service or its users thinking that you are only using their service to market to people. You lose money in terms of time spent creating a video and building a friends list, but you gain from the added traffic to your blog.
In summary, you don't use direct marketing on social networking sites. Instead you point users to a video you posted on a service like YouTube. In the description of the video, you link to your blog or blog post where the direct sales pitch is located. If you built your friends list with people who have expressed an interest in what you have to sell (groups) and if your video is the right message to market match, people will go to your blog without feeling like they are being "sold" anything.
When a client asks this exact question, the first thing I point out is a case study on my name. Before entering the field, a Google search on my name returned absolutely nothing. Google juice= 0. Today, after a year of blogging initiatives, social network profiles and professional experience, I inhabit the first two pages of Google, Yahoo and even Cuil. What some organizations pay thousands of dollars for in PPC advertising and SEO, you can do for free with some dilligent involvement in the social media space.
Angie
@aaswartz on Twitter
www.sixfiguremomsclub.com