Prost Productions

Posts Tagged ‘marketing’

Dear Goliath: You’re the best. Love, David

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Google on Tuesday mounted a national dog-and-pony show to remind Americans that big can be beautiful. The search giant estimates its economic impact at $54 billion a year, and I’m proud to say that I might account for .00000000001% of that. (Just an estimate — I didn’t do the math.)

Without Google, thousands of lifestyle businesses wouldn’t exist. Before Google came along, many entrepreneurs simply couldn’t afford to launch a business. Advertising was expensive and inefficient, and media companies did everything in their power to keep it that way. Local businesses and niche businesses might need to reach just 1 person out of 1,000, but advertising rate cards were inevitably based on 1,000 pairs of eyeballs.

Then along comes Google with its search advertising model, and suddenly I can reach my best prospects for just pennies apiece. If I put enough time and effort into my site, I can even reach those people for free by improving my ranking in Google’s “natural” search results.

With the billions it earns on search, Google develops or improves on other technologies that make my business life easier: email, word processing, presentations, navigation, research, chat. Sure, those things existed before, but Google made them cheap — or free — thus making them accessible to bootstrapping startups.

I find it outrageous that Google had to defend its importance to the U.S. economy. This isn’t a case of spewing oil or uncontrolled acceleration. It’s a matter of envy, pure and simple. Google’s competitors want to say that the giant must be cut down to size. But those competitors are giants themselves — in many cases the very giants who made it so expensive to do business in the pre-Google world.

So please spare me the David-vs-Goliath storyline. I am David, and I’m proud to say I’m hooking up with Goliath.

Chasing what matters

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Last week, a young mother had a panic attack when TSA workers in Atlanta took her toddler out of sight to be searched … and the blogosphere erupted

Last week, a Denver family caused a media sensation when they reported their six-year-old son might be aboard a runaway helium balloon … and the Twitterverse held its breath.

This week, we learned that none of it was true — at least, not as originally presented. Security cameras in Altanta prove that Nicole White was always within a foot or two of her son during their long TSA screening, despite the fevered rant that drove up traffic at her blog.

In Denver, meanwhile, Richard and Mayumi Heene face possible criminal charges after local law enforcement determined that the entire balloon incident was likely a stunt designed to seal the deal for a reality show appearance.

What gives here? Why would seemingly normal, rational people use their children to garner a few minutes of fame?

Here’s our theory: Reality TV and social media have made it easier than ever to get noticed, and we’re beginning to get addicted to attention. We collect friends, followers, fans and contacts as if the sheer numbers somehow proved our worth. We compulsively Google our names and check our blog stats as if to reassure ourselves that others are aware of our existence.

“I tweet, therefore I am,” to paraphrase Descartes for the Digital Age.

The irony is that chasing useless metrics such as pals or pageviews can steal focus away from the things that really matter. In business, social media are supposed to be a marketing tool, not an end in themselves. Yet I know entrepreneurs who worry constantly about their “unfollow” stats on Twitter, even while they make no effort to get a handle on their lost customers.

As for the purely social side of social media, the same principle applies: Online tools should add value in real life — and real life happens offline. Virtual relationships are great if they provide an occasional smile or morale boost throughout the day, but that’s no substitute for having a real drink with real friends.

No offense to our online groupies, but we probably won’t be chatting with you this weekend. Business is business and followers are fun, but we have more important relationships to attend to.

And we’re guessing you do, as well.

Prost!

The business of being sociable

Friday, October 16th, 2009

A Citibank Small Business survey released last week found that 75% of entrepreneurs don’t use Twitter, Facebook and other social media sites to build their business. In analyzing the surprising results, an EVP of Citi’s Small Business unit suggested that entrepreneurs are ignoring social media because they are so busy “doing the things that are really important, especially in these economic times.”

With all due respect, we beg to differ. In a tough economy, nothing could be more important than exploiting the most cost-effective means of building a business. The starting cost for a social media campaign is exactly zero, and what could be more cost-effective than that?

Prost! Productions has been on Twitter for three weeks now, and we’ve already found a new artist, a new distributor, and even a new rep half a world away. We’re also in discussions with multiple wineries to create custom cards to sell in their tasting rooms. If even one of those deals pans out, it will pay for our $50 custom Twitter background many times over.

While all of this hardly makes us Twitter experts, it has turned us into Twitter enthusiasts, and we think more entrepreneurs would share our enthusiasm if they followed a few simple suggestions:

  1. Define success. Know exactly what you hope to achieve, and judge your results accordingly. When you’re starting out, it’s easy to get caught up in the chase for followers, re-tweets and other meaningless metrics that don’t add a dime to your revenues. We started Tweeting with the goal of landing just one new retail account in our first month, so we think we’re successful — even though we have just 121 followers.
  2. Define yourself. There’s nothing deceitful about maintaining multiple Twitter accounts — it’s just a way to keep your identity sharply defined. If you have multiple businesses, create multiple accounts so you’re not Tweeting about Tupperware to the folks who follow you for your health care expertise. Ditto personal interests: It’s great to reveal your personality online, but your business contacts don’t need to know every time the baby spits up.
  3. Don’t chase numbers. We could have multiplied our follower count by many times, but what’s the point? With every new person we follow, we’re adding to the chatter in our Twitter stream, and making it that much harder to pick out the stuff that’s really important. If we want to establish meaningful relationships online, we have to screen out the meaningless ones.

The point is this: If you’re a small-business owner who’s still on the sidelines because you think social media are too self-involved or self-referential, just remember that it doesn’t have to be that way. Twitter, LinkedIn, FaceBook — they’re all just tools that can be used any way you want. And the fact that 75% of your competition is not using the tools? That just means more of a head start for you in building a successful businesss.