Why do people go online?

The Ruder Finn Intent Index

Ruder Finn Intent Index

This article is part of a series of posts that made up the slides for “Social Media 101,” a presentation prepared for the October meeting of the Houston chapter of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). I’ve left these posts intact, but provided additional material to expand and elucidate the outline for that presentation. Added material is indicated throughout the presentation with red annotations.

You can view the program starting from the table of contents or the title slide.

How important are social-media tools?

Social-media statistics
Social-media statistics

 

This article is part of a series of posts that made up the slides for “Social Media 101,” a presentation prepared for the October meeting of the Houston chapter of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). I’ve left these posts intact, but provided additional material to expand and elucidate the outline for that presentation. Added material is indicated throughout the presentation with red annotations.

You can view the program starting from the table of contents or the title slide.

The Changing Face of Marketing

  • Markets are conversations.
  • Social tools lower the cost of transactions.
  • Free is a business model. (See related posts.)
  • The long tail
  • Mass markets vs. the mass of niches
  • Community and conversation

This article is part of a series of posts that made up the slides for “Social Media 101,” a presentation prepared for the October meeting of the Houston chapter of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). I’ve left these posts intact, but provided additional material to expand and elucidate the outline for that presentation. Added material is indicated throughout the presentation with red annotations.

You can view the program starting from the table of contents or the title slide.

Background

  • Me and my friends

This article is part of a series of posts that made up the slides for “Social Media 101,” a presentation prepared for the October meeting of the Houston chapter of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). I’ve left these posts intact, but provided additional material to expand and elucidate the outline for that presentation. Added material is indicated throughout the presentation with red annotations.

You can view the program starting from the table of contents or the title slide.

Introduction: Structure

  • Introduction
  • The Changing Face of Marketing
  • Overview of the Social-media Landscape
    • Technologies
    • Resources
  • Social-media Strategy

This article is part of a series of posts that made up the slides for “Social Media 101,” a presentation prepared for the October meeting of the Houston chapter of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). I’ve left these posts intact, but provided additional material to expand and elucidate the outline for that presentation. Added material is indicated throughout the presentation with red annotations.

You can view the program starting from the table of contents or the title slide.

Introduction: Objectives

  • Reduce your confusion.
  • Increase your curiosity.
  • Give you something useful to take away.

This article is part of a series of posts that made up the slides for “Social Media 101,” a presentation prepared for the October meeting of the Houston chapter of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). I’ve left these posts intact, but provided additional material to expand and elucidate the outline for that presentation. Added material is indicated throughout the presentation with red annotations.

You can view the program starting from the table of contents or the title slide.

Social Media 101

Presented on October 1, 2009, to

NAPO Houston

This article is part of a series of posts that made up the slides for “Social Media 101,” a presentation prepared for the October meeting of the Houston chapter of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO). I’ve left these posts intact, but provided additional material to expand and elucidate the outline for that presentation. Added material is indicated throughout the presentation with red annotations.

You can view the program starting from the table of contents or the title slide.

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