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Danny Brown

Danny Brown

podcaster - author - creator

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Latest posts from Danny Brown

Enjoy the latest posts from Danny Brown, and feel free to add your own thoughts in the comments after the post.

How Social Media Automation Can Encourage Engagement

When it comes to social media, there’s a widely held belief that automation is wrong and that all engagement should be human and one-to-one.

When talking about automation, social media gurus and consultants will offer the following reasons why there may be something wrong with automation:

  • Bots, which are fake, automated Twitter accounts, attract bots,?giving accounts the aura of popularity while never reaching a real human being.
  • The platform shift from conversation to broadcast?is a symptom of what marketers measure.?They measure actions, such as tweets, retweets and link clicks, which discourages dialogue because conversations aren’t valued on the action scale.
  • As soon as you start thinking about people in terms of numbers?and how many followers they have as a guide for interacting with them,?there’s a good chance you’ve already lost them.

While these are valid points, they’ve also got business owners and marketers questioning the value of automation in the social space and wondering whether it’s destroying the fabric of social media’s early promise.

And while I can agree?to a point?that it can be bad when it’s implemented wrong, I’m also a supporter of automation and disagree that it’s “stealing social’s soul.”

The User Responsibility That Comes With Automation

The main reason for any form of automation is to make lives easier.

For consumers, simple solutions like coffee makers with auto settings, cruise control on cars and smartphone app updates make life easier.

For businesspeople, automated functions like email list cleaning, targeted updates based on online demographic use, and filtering of leads versus service issues versus queries allows us to scale more effectively instead of having to manually carry out these chores.

But as useful as these automated functions are to get through our days faster, there’s also the ever-present danger that automation can be abused or rendered ineffective for one simple reason: user responsibility.

For instance, while cruise control for a car can take the stress out of driving, it can also make you lazy when it comes to being aware of the road around you. And while targeted updates based on an audience time online can help laser focus your content strategy,?it can backfire horrendously if a national tragedy strikes.

User responsibility is key for any part of our daily decision-making process, but that’s especially true when it comes to automated actions versus manual ones.?Automation is hugely effective and beneficial but only if the user respects the flexibility that automation offers.

Combining Automation With Engagement

One of the main reasons that social media automation is seen as bad is the?fear that it will cause social platforms to shift from being conversational tools to conduits for social proof measurement as a success metric.

And to a degree, there’s some truth behind those fears: The popularity of such tools as Klout and Triberr, where social reach and impressions are driving factors of success, merely strengthen that point of view.

Thankfully, these are the kind of soft metrics that businesses and smart marketers alike are beginning to separate themselves from.

[clickToTweet tweet=”Smart businesses use both automation and engagement to connect with their target audience.” quote=”Smart businesses use both automation and engagement to connect with their target audience.”]

So while social proof?can?be a metric of popularity, which itself can be viewed as a metric of authority, it’s increasingly being seen for what it is?usually fluffed-up numbers with very few actions behind them. But automation can help with identifying insights that inform marketers to be smarter and more effective.

For example, let’s say you want to AB test the acceptance of a new product on the market. You know who your target audience is, but you aren’t quite sure what will tip them from being potential customers to researchers of your product to actual customers.

So you use automation to find out:

  • You craft a series of messages across different content providers?email, video, blog posts, social network updates?and program them to go out at the same time and then at different times.
  • You use PURLs (personal URLs) to track actions on each message and each channel.
  • Your filtering software cleans out the bounced emails, the non-shared content and your low-traffic blog posts.
  • It then analyzes the content that worked, what times were best, where, and on who, and it essentially details what your strategy should be for the full launch.

But that’s just part of the story.

Using text analytics software, you can track all the pieces of conversation around each delivery method?how it made recipients feel, what the overall sentiment was, where a sale would have occurred had there been just the slightest change in information available, who sways your audience’s decision and more.

So instead of simply relying on the data?as strong as it is?from the automated AB testing, you’re combining these results with human intelligence to discover how we can identify the nuances of otherwise unimportant phrases, if left to technology.

And that’s where automation both benefits and is benefited by engagement through conversational insights.

While automated data and research leaves only the strongest lead opportunities, conversational insights can enhance that research by diving deeper into the context that could allow for other opportunities outside those identified by automation.

Now – is that really?such a bad thing?

But That Doesn’t Make You a Writer

I’m sitting here in front of my MacBook, fingers hitting the keyboard letters every now and again, trying to put down into words the cool idea I had for a post earlier today.

I know how it should flow; I know how it should read; I know the start, middle, and finish. But I can’t get it to come out the way it presented itself in my head.

There are many reasons for that.

One, I’m stupid tired. Several late nights and early rises have caught up with me, and my eyes feel like they’d burn holes in snow faster than a drunk’s hot piss.

Two, there are so many distractions around me that, while I know I should be ignoring them, are present all the same. And I can’t ignore them.

The third, and probably most relevant point, is I’m not a writer, so I don’t practice the process of flow, of transferring ideas to prose, and moving beyond the mind-block when the block’s setting in like cement on a new driveway.

Because while I may write content on a page like the one you’re reading now, that doesn’t make me a writer. Enough people – writers, real writers – have told me that enough times that?every one of their disparate statements are now just one single soundbite.

You put words together. You sometimes make it enjoyable. It may even get you praise from your readers. But that doesn’t make you a writer.

So that’s why I’m currently sat here, wondering if I can get the opening pushed through to the middle part and weave its way to the end.

Because if I don’t, I’ve just wasted my time, right?

Maybe so. But do I give a fuck? No.

What Is a Writer?

So I don’t have prose flowing from my fingers like the classics that make ordinary scribes writers.

So I don’t have students of the English language discussing my words as part of their mark for their senior year exam.

So I don’t have a key to the city where I was born, for bringing the literary masses to see where that city’s wordsmith was born, and raising the tourism income a certain percent above the average.

So I don’t get introduced at parties as “the writer, [INSERT NAME HERE]”.

Does that matter?

Maybe I’m not a writer. Maybe you’re not a writer either, because you don’t have any of the prerequisites above to be “a writer”.

Does that lessen the words that do come out? Do they offer less gravitas than someone who’d be described as a real writer, because they write prose and books that sell versus words on blogs that exist?

Maybe. Maybe not. To be honest, it’s not something that should matter.

It’s the Words, Not the Writer

If you touch someone emotionally, are you less of a writer because that emotion bled from a blog post?

If you connect with someone viscerally, are you less of a writer because the visceral origin was a block quote?

If you describe something less grammatically but more visually, are you less of a writer because the visual stemmed from the connected resonance of blogger and reader taking it into a new dimension in the comments?

I don’t really know where I’m going with this.

Like I said at the start, I’m beat,?and a little distracted with several things that need to be done before the end of the week. So I may not even be writing something that flows, or makes some kind of sense to more than just me.

I’m sure those that critique words that don’t fit into?their definition of prose will add a new sentence or two that says the same thing.

You shared your thoughts, but that doesn’t make you a writer.

And maybe that’s true. What do I know? I just put thoughts into words that may or may not form some structured flow, even if that flow is the Orinoco one.

Would the flow be better if I was a real writer? Probably.

Would the direction be more focused if I was a real writer? Probably.

Would the words connect deeper on any level if I was a real writer?

That, my friends, is the question that really matters. And you don’t have to be a real writer to answer it.

Why We Should Be Listening to Unconventional Wisdom

Conventional wisdom tells us new businesses shouldn?t take risks.

Conventional wisdom tells us to adhere to process, because it’s there for a reason.

Conventional wisdom tells us children should be seen and not heard.

Conventional wisdom tells us not to fix what isn?t broke.

But conventional wisdom also told us that flight was a pipe dream. Conventional wisdom also told us the earth was flat. Conventional wisdom has led us into wars based on lies.

Conventional wisdom is fine. But unconventional wisdom? That?s where the possibilities lie.

Are We Choosing to Offer Too Much Choice at Times?

Too much choice

What attracts you more ? an image in a magazine or a 400-word text advertisement??Do you prefer short blog posts or longer ones?

Do you watch short movies on YouTube, or longer?

Do you prefer a one-sheet menu or a multi-page one at a restaurant?

At a bar, is your preference for 100 bottles of liquor to choose from or a more specific collection?

We spend a lot of our lives making decisions on decisions. We look at multiple choices and then wonder if we picked the right one after all. Doubt creeps into our minds, and no-one likes to doubt their decision.

Do we need so much choice all the time?

Do your customers, your blog visitors, your newspaper readers, your immediate connections need that amount of choice? They come to you for a reason ? should you potentially dilute that reason with too much choice?

Don?t get me wrong ? choice is good. Choice stops us from stagnating. But are we choosing to offer too much choice at times?

One to One Blog Consulting? I’m Your Huckleberry

Blogging success

For the last 8 years or so, I’ve helped a lot of friends and family dive into the wonderful world of blogging, both for personal and professional use.

Many have been put off blogging up until then, thinking it was either something we did in solitary, or something that they had little time (and even less inclination) to do so.

Once they jumped in, though, and set realistic goals based on what they wanted from blogging – from a place just to put down thoughts and encourage others to chime in, to using a blog as an awareness and lead generation platform – they loved it, and haven’t looked back.

I’ve tended to stay away from “teaching” blogging to a wider audience up until now, primarily because I didn’t feel the need to offer it. In the last 3-6 months, however, a lot of readers, subscribers and online connections have asked if I ever do hourly consulting/teaching.

And that actually made sense to offer. So here we are.

Why Trust Your Blog With Me?

Good question, and one that I’m not going to come back with a hundred reasons pointing to this reason, or that one, or blah blah blah.

Instead, I’ll simply say I’ve been blogging for about 15+ years now – it’s been one of my passions for a long time, and remains so even with all the naysayers that say “blogging is dead, social media is the new content king”. Yawn.

In that time, I’ve probably shared thousands of hours of advice, tips, ideas, and content to give you some insights into how to start, manage and nurture a blog.

This has included premium content, as well as consult for agencies and brands looking to take their own brand message into more content-driven direction.

The one thing that’s stood out over these years is that while tips and advice are helpful, it’s only when you get down to the real one-to-one consulting/discussion that we can really start to work on what your goals are, and where they can be met (some won’t be, and that’s okay).

Because of this, I’m only going to be offering two very specific options:

  • An initial consultation, where we can chat about what your goals are, I can give you some advice right off the bat about the changes needed to make those goals happen, and where you might need further consultation down the line. Cost: $80 USD
  • An ongoing consultation, where you choose how often you wish to work together, what each consult should help you on, and where you’re ready to take the reins yourself for the next phase in your blogging journey. Cost: $100 USD

And that’s it. No one-size-fits-all course; no downloads; no “Follow these ten steps and you’ll be a blogging superstar” message.

Instead, you’ll get honest feedback and direction, as well as the support of someone who truly cares about your goals, and how you’re going to meet them (and which ones you need to put on the back-burner for now).

If that sounds like something you’re interested in, awesome – just use the form on my consulting page, and let’s get started. Make sure to enter your blog’s URL in the “Notes” section so I can review before our Skype or Google Hangout.

And as a welcome offer, use the code INTRO20 on your payment screen for a 20% discount.

I look forward to working together.

If you have any pre-sales questions, feel free to drop them in the comment section below and I’ll be happy to answer them.

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