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10 Social Media Strategy Ideas that Generate Real Results

The competition for attention is fierce. Learn how to stand out! 10 social media strategy ideas to help your business generate real results.

Source: rebekahradice.com

I found this on Twitter this morning by way of Rebekah Radice. These ten steps are so basic, but a good reminder of what does work. I’ve learned this by trial and error on my own, but also learned it through my digital marketing class that I’m taking right now. These aren’t hard steps, especially for most technical communicators, yet it’s a good refresher. 

 

Take a look. 

–techcommgeekmom

See on Scoop.itM-learning, E-Learning, and Technical Communications

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New Listing in TechCommGeekMom’s Education Resources Page!

Award Certificate There is a new program now listed in the Instructional Design Education Resources found on the ID/TC Education Resources page (see the tab above).

Many thanks to Stephen Roda for bringing to my attention the online Master’s of Education in Instructional Design and Technology program at Anna Maria College, located in Massachusetts. After looking at the course requirements, this looks like another great program to add to the list!

Go to the ID/TC Education Resources page, and download the Instructional Design Education Resources PDF that lists the link to this program and other great instructional design programs as well.

Do you know of another tech comm or instructional design program that isn’t listed in my information? Email me, and let me know!

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Google Launches ‘YouTube Kids,’ a New Family-Friendly App | WIRED

Google has launched a service called YouTube Kids, a new version of the internet’s leading destination for video aimed squarely at children.

Source: www.wired.com

Oh, I wish this had been out sooner! My son is a little too old for this now that he’s almost 14, but YouTube videos for the 12 years old and under group is a great idea. The filters on the regular YouTube aren’t so great, so hopefully this product will allow parents–and teachers–some peace of mind letting the kids access videos this way. Time will tell….

–techcommgeekmom

See on Scoop.itM-learning, E-Learning, and Technical Communications

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If you skipped Windows 8, here’s some new stuff you get with Windows 10

The divisive UI changes distracted from more welcome lower-level upgrades.

Source: arstechnica.com

I admit, I am one of those last holdouts still on Windows 7. I was very hesitant to upgrade to Windows 8 when it came out, and despite fixes that were made since its release, I haven’t committed to the upgrade. Based on this article, I’m more excited to upgrade to Windows 10 once it comes out. I’m hoping that some of the changes will, indeed, help improve how well my machine works as a result, and perhaps I can save a couple thousand dollars in not getting a new laptop. We’ll see…

What do you think of the features mentioned here? Comment below. 

–techcommgeekmom

See on Scoop.itM-learning, E-Learning, and Technical Communications

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Online Student Again – Part 3: Social Media Marketing–Now You’re Talking My Language!

social-networksThe next module of my online digital mini-MBA in Digital Marketing was about social media marketing. Simply from the name of it, I suspected that I had a better chance with this topic than I had with search marketing. I took a look at the slides and completed the pre-reading assignments, and sure enough, I understood ALL of it.  Why? Because I’ve entrenched myself into social media from the beginning of my tech comm career, and it’s why you are reading this article. It’s all about how to use social media for promotion and starting the conversation with your readers through the use of meaningful content.

I was lucky that I had a great course on the theory and practices of social media at NJIT, which I still refer to in presentations and still greatly affects me to this day. That course was what started this blog, after all! I learned many of these marketing concepts through trial and error over the last three years.

There were so many concepts that easily clicked for me, which included what I’ve been struggling to get people to understand not only from a social media perspective, but from a content strategy perspective as a whole! It seems that most of the issues from a corporate level stem from a cultural standpoint, and that corporate culture is not willing to evolve and change with the times! There are other complications, but that’s the primary one. I know from working with several companies, I’ve seen this often. There’s some progress, but it’s not the progress that I would recommend. (But I’m a consultant at the bottom of the food chain, so I know I don’t have a chance to be heard anytime soon.)

The biggest part of this module that I agreed with entirely was that social media is not another type of media along the lines of singularly directional TV, radio, or print. Social media is SOCIAL, people, so it’s about that two-way communication that I wrote about in my last blog post. The instructor for this module of the course, Mark Schaefer, is the author of several books on the subject and has been in marketing for 30+ years, and discussed much of what I’ve come to understand on my own! He went into deeper detail of it all, but he talked about the idea of creating strategies that create relevant content that connects. He said that we are already experiencing content overload, and the key is figuring out how to filter the relevant content that connects people to each other. It’s no longer B2B (Business to Business), but rather P2P (Person to Person).  Mr. Schaefer is also the author of Tao of Twitter where he provides insights on how Twitter can be used effectively–and ineffectively–for content marketing.  As students of this course, we all received a digital copy of the book. Based on how this module went, I definitely plan to read this! (Perhaps I’ll do a TechCommGeekMom Book Review about it as soon as I finish it.)

This time, I got 100% on my quiz on the first try.  So many of the concepts in this module were easy for me, I think simply because there was such a strong connection between content strategy and social media concepts that I already knew or learned on my own in the last few years, either from experience or from various presentations I’ve seen at conferences (Intelligent Content Conference is a great example–did you see that discount there on the right side bar? If it’s still there, take advantage of it! It’s a very good conference on this very topic!)  After last week’s struggles with Search Marketing, I was relieved that this module, while truly packed with a lot of information, was much more my speed and less confusing.

I know Rutgers offers another mini-MBA program that is solely on social media marketing, and I’m sure that I’d like that very much, but I think I’ll wait and see how this mini-MBA goes first. I’m not sure that I necessarily need the social media marketing mini-MBA, but Mr. Schaefer said he teaches in that one, and if this module was a broad summary of the larger course, then I think I’d be okay!

The next module is something that I think I’ll have a pretty decent understanding of as well…mobile marketing! Y’all know that I love my mobile tech comm and m-learning, so I have a feeling that many of the concepts that will be brought up in this module will be familiar to me or easy to understand as well. Until the next module…