2. WHO AM I?
• Connector. Communicator. Curious as hell.
• As editor of the liveBooks RESOLVE Blog, and before that as senior editor at
American Photo Magazine, I both observed and experienced the recent
reordering of worldwide media. While this has scared and confused some
people, it excites me — my goal now is to instill that excitement in people
who might otherwise be confused and scared.
3. WHAT I’M NOT
•A social media evangelist
• Constantly plugged in
• An “expert”
4. WHAT I AM
• Paid to be online
• Curious about communication (and people)
• Doing something I really love
5. WHO ARE YOU?
• What is your business?
• Who are your clients?
• What are your goals?
• How much online experience do you have?
• Why are you interested in social media?
• What worries you about social media?
7. WHAT IS THE INTERNET?
•A place
•A tool
•A state of mind
• THE REAL WORLD
8. WHY DO YOU NEED TO BE THERE?
• Your customers are there.
• It looks bad for you not to be there.
• It’s a way to connect with new customers.
• It’s a way to get more from existing customers.
• It helps people find and trust you.
• It’s a way to start a conversation.
10. WEBSITE: YOUR SHOP
• Customers find it by recommendation or stumble upon it
• Want it to be clean, well organized, easy to move around
• Want it to answer any questions quickly and kindly
• Want customers to be able to make purchases
11. BLOG: YOUR HOME
• Make them feel like you’re chatting in your living room
• Pictures, books, daily planner, diary: Who you are
• Can always find you there, but always evolving
• Traffic generator vs. extended bio + SEO
12. FACEBOOK: SCHOOL UPDATES
• Check in on people you know to varying degrees
• Updates and recommendations from colleagues/friends
• Reconnect with people
• Let colleagues follow you on their own terms
13. TWITTER: COFFEE SHOP
• Snippets of different kinds of information
• Quick catch-up, TV news, longer articles, humor, art
• Great for listening as well as getting work done
• Where you meet someone before you know them well
14. VIDEO: TV
• One-way communication, but with some feedback
• Like a commercial, but more personal
• People connect with faces, voices, gestures
• Viral potential
15. RATINGS SITES: WATER COOLER
• Hey have you seen that new __________?
• More about cumulative reviews than any individual one
• People trust other’s opinions more than business’s
• Help people find you
16. SEARCH: YELLOW PAGES
• They don’t know who you are, know what they need
• How would you search for what you do? (Keywords)
• Why would they choose you from a list of results?
• What is the information you want them to see first?
17. NEWSLETTER: PHONE CALL
• Fewest distractions
• Catch up on what you’re doing, new developments
• Chance to hear from them and remind them you’re there
• Chance to ask them to recommend new people to you
• Chance to offer deals, increase customer loyalty
• Totally trackable
19. WHO IS YOUR CUSTOMER?
• Demographics: Age, income, employment, education
• Are all of them online? A specific segment?
• Where are they most likely to be online?
20. CREATE A CUSTOMER PROFILE
• Who are they?
• What do they do online?
• How will they find you? (Search, press, recommendations, org.)
• Which 3 networks have most potential?
23. PAY ATTENTION TO...
• How you find things
• Why you leave sites
• When you find yourself drawn in
• Why you decide to trust certain people online
• How you contact someone online
• What kind of personality you identify with
26. BLOGGING
• Not linking, ugly links
• Not providing clear path back to main site
• Not looking at analytics
• Bad comment system, not responding to comments
• Too much self-promotion, not enough self
27. FACEBOOK
• Not explaining why you’re friending someone
• Not tagging people
• Tagging people too much
• Not sharing enough info with non-friends
• Too much self-promotion
28. TWITTER
• Not shortening URLs
• Posting lots of updates all at once
• Not creating lists/streams
• Too many @conversations
• Too much self-promotion
30. WHY A STORY?
• Easy to remember and share
• Human’s crave stories (so does the press)
• Somewhere between your brand and personal voice
• It will make it easier for you to talk about yourself
31. EXAMPLE: MY STORY
• As editor of the liveBooks RESOLVE Blog, and before that
as senior editor at American Photo Magazine, I both
observed and experienced the recent reordering of
worldwide media. While this has scared and confused some
people, it excites me — my goal now is to instill that
excitement in people who might otherwise be confused
and scared.
32. MY BIO
• As the Social Media Editor for liveBooks until April 2010, Miki
Johnson ran the RESOLVE Photo Blog and managed social media
for the photography website company. Previously, Miki was Senior
Editor at American Photo Magazine in New York City, where she
also launched and edited the first year of Pop Photo College
Edition. She currently works as a social media and online branding
consultant, a photography writer, and a creative facilitator, all under
the heading of "personal publishing strategist." Details here: http://
mikijohnson.com/hire-me/
33. MY JOB DESCRIPTION
I’m a Personal Publishing Strategist. Ok, so “Personal Publishing Strategist” is a term I invented, but hear
me out. You might not realize it, but you are a publisher. From your emails to your Tweet Stream to
the photos you share on Facebook, you are distributing a huge amount of content every day.
Like any publication worth subscribing to, it’s important that what you put out be valuable, genuine,
and coherent. That’s when people really pay attention to you — that’s when people you’ve always
wanted to work with but have never met email you out of the blue. (Seriously, it happens.)
If you were starting your own magazine, you’d need to research the market, define your editorial
mission, formulate a business plan, publicize, advertise … but you, you’re a “personal publisher,” you
just want to continue to do the work you love. You just need a little bit of guidance, let’s call it
“strategy.” That’s where I come in.
34. MY GOOGLE PROFILE
Although most of my special powers involve talking to people and
turning that into stories of one kind or another, I went into
journalism because it allowed me to become a mini expert in a
huge range of topics. I think learning things is fun, and I'm always
down to help convince more people of that...especially if they're
learning about awesome photography projects and how important
written and visual journalism is to our basic understanding of the
world.
35. YOUR CORE STORY
IN THREE SENTENCES
• Who you are
• Why you started your business
• What you love about it (and promise you’re making)