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A Guide on How to Not Suck At Social Media Campaign Marketing! | North Salem Realtor

Campaign marketing starts with a mind warping process that often involves the creatives drinking shots of bourbon, taking long lunches and looking for inspiration at a movie. That is if you believe the 1960′s TV series Mad Men depiction of an ad agency.

A Guide on How to Not Suck At Social Media Campaign Marketing

The reality is often much more boring than that and can involve research on competitors, identifying the target market and clarifying the goals that need to be achieved for the campaign. Then add some seasoned experience of what works and what doesn’t to the mix gained through the cauldron of success and failures over the years.

Those of you with an interest in online promotion will undoubtedly have heard about the importance of social media networks such as Facebook and Twitter. However, you may not have any idea how to leverage these kinds of platforms for the maximum business benefit.

What Exactly Is A Campaign?

A campaign is defined in the Oxford dictionary as

The process of working in an organized and active way towards a goal”.

It is often necessary to take a number of steps to the achievement of the overall objective. For example, a company that aims to build a loyal community of 10,000 Twitter followers will initially have the task of creating a positive online profile.

So – What Is Campaign Marketing?

Campaign marketing involves the promotion of a certain, product, service or business. It often entails the use of various channels, such as the internet, traditional newspapers and television. Companies often rely upon the effective establishment of marketing campaigns as a means of differentiation from the competition.

Multi-Channel marketing executed correctly can be a powerful combination and you only need to look at the success of the Old Spice campaigns that kicked off with the seeding on mass media and then took it viral with YouTube and Twitter.

Example of Campaign Marketing That Was Totally Kick-ass!?

Particularly innovative use has been made of the leading social networks in recent years. In 2011 the manufacturers at Belling promoted a number of ultra-short recipes via Twitter. And towards the end of 2012 the Melbourne Transport Authority released a humorous and highly popular Youtube video about the dumbest ways of dying.

However, the example that really stands out is the integrated billboard and social media campaign arranged by Nike to coincide with the London Olympics.

The well known sports brand placed numerous posters, featuring the pictures of ‘everyday athletes’ and the hashtag #McDStories to invite customers to leave comments about their love of Happy Meals.

McDStories Hashtag Campaign Disaster

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the campaign turned sour and people started to tweet about the shoddy service and foul food that they’d been served in McDonald’s chains.

So What Do I Need To Do To Not Suck At This?

There are 5 keys to a successful marketing campaign and it starts with taking a unique approach.

#1. Be Original

The Nike example shows the importance of taking a unique approach to social media marketing. It would have been very easy to follow the Adidas and use pictures of real Olympic athletes. However, by using images of ‘normal people’ Nike showed that they had a connection with the vast majority of people who purchase sports apparel.

Just remember that any attempts at differentiation should cast your company in a positive light.

#2. Engage With the Target Market

If you want to reach the types of people who will buy your product or service then it will be necessary to conduct some research. Find out which of the social networks they use on a regular basis. Then devise marketing campaigns that will be of genuine interest.

And make sure that you tread the fine line of communicating in the customer’s language without being patronising.

#3. Have Realistic Expectations

If you learned how to play a few guitar chords, would you expect to create the best piece of music in the world? Probably not. Unfortunately the same goes for the creation of online marketing campaigns. You’ll have to build up experience of what works and what doesn’t. And don’t be surprised if your company video doesn’t go viral overnight.

Having said that, success may come at the most unexpected of times!

#4. Use Platforms Other Than Twitter & Facebook

Research has revealed that Facebook has over 1 billion active monthly users, while Twitter has a mere 200 million. So it’s definitely worth creating integrated campaigns that target both of these networks. However, this doesn’t mean that you should ignore other forms of social media, such as Youtube or Google +. The famous Korean creator of Gagnam style and the ‘one pound fish man’ would definitely attest to this advice.

#5. Promote Your Products/Services Fairly

It is worth remembering that social media wasn’t invented for the purpose of brand advertising. Rather, it was an online tool that would enable people to connect and share the content that they particularly liked. So it’s fairly easy to understand why the users don’t like to be bombarded with targeted advertisements.

Outreach should be gradual and not overly promotional.

Guest Author: This post has been contributed by Martina Simon who works for Datadial which is a London based Web company who specialise in the creation of social media campaigns.

 

 

 

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It is now available to download. I show you how to create and build a blog that rocks and grow tribes, fans and followers on social networks such as Twitter and Facebook. It also includes dozens of tips to create contagious content that begs to be shared and tempts people to link to your website and blog.

I also reveal the tactics I used to grow my Twitter followers to over 139,000.

Download and read it now.

 

 

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RealtyTrac: Foreclosure sales uneven across the nation | North Salem Real Estate

Foreclosure properties sold during 2012 decreased by 6% from 2011 and down 11% from 2010, RealtyTrac said in its fourth quarter and year-end 2012 foreclosure and short sales report.

Based in Irvine, Calif., RealtyTrac is the leading online marketplace for foreclosure properties.

“Although foreclosure-related sales represent a shrinking share of total sales, primarily because of fewer bank-owned purchases, distressed sales are still a disproportionately high portion of the overall housing market,” said Daren Blomquist, vice president of RealtyTrac. 

Pre-foreclosure sales increased 6% from 2011, returning just 1% below the 2010 total of pre-foreclosure sales. Since RealtyTrac began tracking in 2005, 2010 held the highest annual total. Pre-foreclosure homes took an average of 336 days to sell after starting the foreclosure process, and properties sold for an average price of $190,031.

Even though REO sales fell in the nationwide total, numbers still increased in 26 states. 498,122 REOs were sold to third parties, which is down 15% from 2011 and down 19% from 2011. REOs sold for an average of $151,998 and took and average of 178 days to sell.

Short sales are sales where the price was below the estimated amount of all outstanding loans for a given property. On average in 2012, non-foreclosure short sales were on average $81,621 short of the loan amount owed. As the year progressed in 2012, short sales increased. Short sales increased 2% from the third quarter of 2012 and increased 17% from the fourth quarter of 2011. Short sales of properties not in foreclosure were estimated to account for 22% of all residential sales in 2012.

2 Million Homeowners No Longer Underwater on Mortgage: Zillow | North Salem Homes

 

The rebound in housing took a slight pause this week with weaker-than-expected housing starts and a dip in homebuilder confidence for January.

But Zillow Inc., the largest home-related marketplace on the web and mobile, issued a report Thursday that tells the brighter side of the housing story. Nearly 2 million U.S. homeowners were freed from negative equity last year, which means they are no longer underwater on their mortgages. The cities that saw the most improvement included Phoenix, Los Angeles and Miami.

Related: Housing Market Improves Despite Decline in Housing Starts and Confidence

“2012 was a pretty big year for working down negative equity,” says Zillow chief economist Stan Humphries in the accompanying video, adding that strong home value appreciation was a big contributor to that trend.

Home values rose roughly 6% in 2012 to a median value of $157,400, according to the Zillow Home Value Index. That price appreciation, along with the elevated level of home foreclosures, led to the drop in negative equity in 2012.

Related: Housing Market Still Needs Fannie Mae, Says Chief Economist Doug Duncan

While these figures are encouraging, the total number of homeowners that remain underwater is still very high. Almost 14 million homeowners still owed more on their mortgage than their homes were worth last year; down from 15.7 million at the end of 2011. Collectively, homeowners were underwater by $1 trillion in 2012.

Over the course of 2013, Zillow expects another 1 million American homeowners will no longer be underwater on their mortgage, which would reflect a slowdown in the trend. Zillow expects home value appreciation to slow to about 3% in 2013, half the pace of last year, as the supply of homes on the market increases.

Related: This Is Housing Bubble 2.0: David Stockman

Overall, Humphries says the housing market is “doing quite well” and the “fundamentals of housing look quite good.”

The National Association of Realtor’s will release existing homes sales today at 10 am.

 

 

NYC Styrofoam Ban Might Actually Happen | North Salem Real Estate

Attention NYC eateries: It may be time to start thinking beyond styrofoam.

A sanitation official Wednesday revealed that a potential ban on the white stuff is under discussion as part of an upcoming report on increasing recycling rates in residential areas. “We’re studying all the different things in our waste stream. We want to make sure that everything in our waste stream is recyclable,” Ron Gonen, deputy commissioner for recycling at Sanitation, told The Post.

According to the AP, Mayor Michael Bloomberg last year set a goal of recycling 30 percent of the city’s household trash by 2017, up from about 15 percent now.

Of course, none of this is surprising. Styrofoam in notoriously difficult to recycle and takes a very long time to decompose (anywhere from a decade to centuries). Here’s NYC current official position on the stuff: 

Styrofoam is very difficult to recycle unless kept very clean and separate from all other types of plastic. For this reason, New York City and most other cities’ plastics recycling programs do not collect it with commingled recycling.

Because of the difficulty of recycling expanded polystyrene, there are relatively few plants in the U.S. that will take it. This means that the material must be shipped to distant factories. The transport and processing is expensive, unsustainable, and not environmentally friendly.

DSNY Bureau of Waste Prevention, Reuse and Recycling encourages New Yorkers to consider alternatives to Styrofoam wherever possible.

So yes, it’s basically only a matter of time before styrofoam is shown the door. Naturally, the restaurant industry is less than pleased.

“We shouldn’t start banning products until we have done a more full analysis of the costs associated, not only with government but for small businesses,” New York State Restaurant Association spokesman Andrew Moesel told the AP Wednesday. “Now is not the time to continue to put more regulations and cost burdens on an industry that is already struggling to make a profit.”

Photo credit: Shutterstock.com

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About Michael dEstries

Michael has been blogging since 2005 on issues such as sustainability, renewable energy, philanthropy, and healthy living. He regularly contributes to a slew of publications, as well as consulting with companies looking to make an impact using the web and social media. He lives in Ithaca, NY with his family on an apple farm.

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Home prices see best yearly gain since 2006 | North Salem Realtor

A U.S. flag decorates a for-sale sign at a home in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Washington, August 21, 2012. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

A U.S. flag decorates a for-sale sign at a home in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Washington, August 21, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst

 

Home prices rose in November to rack up their best yearly gain since the housing crisis began, a further sign that the sector is on the mend.

 

But data on consumer confidence on Tuesday was less encouraging, with moods falling to their lowest level in more than a year as Americans became more pessimistic about the economic outlook and their financial prospects.

 

The S&P/Case Shiller composite index of 20 metropolitan areas gained 0.6 percent in November on a seasonally adjusted basis, in line with economists’ forecasts.

 

Prices in the 20 cities rose 5.5 percent year over year, making for the strongest yearly price increase since August 2006 when prices were on their way down.

 

“This is continuing a trend in place for the better part of a year,” said Omair Sharif, U.S. economist at RBS Securities in New York. “This is another indication that the housing rebound is fairly entrenched at this point.”

 

The housing market became a bright spot for the economy last year as prices rose and inventory tightened. The sector is expected to contribute to economic growth in 2013, though a number of challenges remain, including tight access to mortgages and on-going foreclosures.

It was the 10th month in a row that prices have increased, the longest string of gains since before 2006. Last year’s rise in prices beat a nine-month consecutive run in 2009 and 2010, when the market was boosted by a homebuyer tax credit.

Separate data from The Conference Board showed an index of consumer attitudes fell to 58.6 in January from an upwardly revised 66.7 the month before, falling short of economists’ expectations for 64. It was the lowest level since November 2011.

At the start of the year, U.S. politicians came to an agreement that averted the so-called fiscal cliff of spending cuts and tax increases that had been set to come into effect.

But the deal did raise taxes for many Americans, while a payroll tax holiday came to an end. Also, a number of budget decisions remain.

“Consumers are probably pretty unhappy to notice that their payroll taxes have gone up,” said David Sloan, economist at 4Cast Ltd in New York.

U.S. stocks pared slight gains immediately after the report was released, while the euro rose to a session high against the dollar.

The expectations index tumbled to its lowest level since October 2011 at 59.5 from 68.1. The present situation measure slipped to 57.3 from 64.6.

Consumers’ views on the labor market were also weaker, with the “jobs hard to get” index rising for the first time since September.

Home prices on a non-adjusted basis slipped 0.1 percent. The non-adjusted numbers showed prices fell in about half of the cities covered by the survey, with the winter months typically a weak period for housing, the survey said.

Phoenix, which saw its housing market rebound sharply last year, led with the biggest yearly gain at 22.8 percent. New York was the only city to fall, down 1.2 percent from the previous year.