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Posts Tagged ‘Social Media’

BP’s Social Media Nightmare

May 26th, 2010 2 comments

First sky rocketing gas prices from a year or two ago, followed by record profits by oil companies, combined with the Gulf Oil Spill which may very well go down in history as one of the worst man-made ecological disasters of all time are culiminating to create the perfect PR storm for BP.  This is one oil company with a bit of an image problem.

An unresponsive US Government coupled with a corporation bent on not disclosing information to the general public has turned into major disaster.  Media continues to report the story:  ”It’s bad, and it’s getting worse.”   Not to diminish the seriousness of what’s going on, but from a social media perspective it’s a tragedy of another kind.  In simple terms, it’s a PR nightmare for BP.

As of  Tuesday night close to 115,000 people on Facebook have joined the “Boycott BP” Page, and many other (yet smaller) pages are springing up with a few thousand people “liking” them as well.  When I searched for the official BP Page on Facebook there was nothing to be found.  

Upon further searching and eventually going to BP’s website I found an icon for their Facebook Page.  Click it, and you’re taken to the Deepwater Horizon Response FB page with no mention whatsoever of BP.  The page, as of late Tuesday evening, had under 25,000 fans.  Let’s do the math: 115,000  > 25,000  (nearly a 5:1 ratio)

Maybe things will be better for BP on Twitter.  Not really.  Actually, it’s worse.  Twitter is all abuzz about BP.  I’m on the East Coast, writing at 2 am, watching live  Twitter Search updates of “BP” – thousands pop up in a span of minutes.  The majority of what’s being tweeted (98% in my opinion) is not positive.  A Huffington Post story highlighting a website that is “taking bets on what species will go extinct as a result of the spill” is gaining a lot of traction on Twitter

BP’s Official Twitter account is pumping out tweets every hour or so.  Advising their followers, who number just under 5,400, of what they’re doing.  It appears pretty much to be a rehash of “their” Facebook Page.   Meanwhile, a fake BP Twitter account has surfaced and has garnered a much large following with only 79 tweets (at the time of this writing).  @BPGlobalPR has nearly 35,000 followers and is getting retweeted (RT’d) a lot…and showing up all over Facebook in people’s status updates.  Whoever’s behind it is making BP look really bad.

I have to admit that some of the @BPGlobalPR tweets are rather humorous – in a horrible kind of way.  Again, the damage this spill is doing and will continue to do for God knows how long is a very bad thing.  But tweets like “We feel terrible about spilling oil in American waters, we’ll make sure the next spill happens where the terrorists live. #bpcares” and “It’s official, the phrase “All the tea in china” has been replaced with ‘All the oil in the gulf” – Can’t wait for the royalties!” made me laugh out loud.

Funny stuff at the expense of a big oil company that some say gouged us all in recent years.  Now @BPGlobalPR is saying what we deep down inside half-way expected them to be thinking all along.  Did I mention they’re also selling t-shirts?

Almost forgot – let’s do the math: 79 tweets + 35,000 followers > 302 tweets + 5,400 followers (nearly 7:1 ratio)

BP’s CEO was quoted as saying the big oil spill is “tiny” in relation to the “very big ocean.” From the looks of the social media buzz surrounding it, I’d say the people aren’t buying it.

A friend of mine recently updated their Facebook status with the following:

“Dear BP,

Perhaps you should spend your money cleaning up the mess you made instead of paying Google to put you at the top of their list so that you can attempt to appear as though you’re actually doing something worth a damn to stop the “leak” (i.e. huge gushing mass of oil) in the Gulf and actually trying to prevent it from ruining the entire Gulf Coast and killing every living thing that inhabits the entire area.
Thanks”

Do a Google search for “Gulf Oil Spill” for yourself and see what comes up at the very top.

I’m curious to know what your take is on this.  Is BP showing up on your social media radar at all?  From my vantage point they seem non-existant.  Tell me all about it and maybe I’ll send you a shirt.

4 Myths, 5 Ways, 10 Stages, 20 Tools and 30 Tips for Social Media Marketing Success

January 20th, 2010 2 comments

Last week there was a flood of really good information coming out of the blogosphere.  So much that I decided to aggregate it here for those wanting to learn more about digital marketing and how it could fit into your business marketing plan.

4 Myths About Social Media and Business

Great little article by Leah Betancourt.  She breaks down some misconceptions that small business owners may believe about taking their business to the masses online.  Myths such as:

  • Small Businesses Must Be on Social Media (okay, I may disagree with Leah on this a bit, but her point is if your existing client pool is not active in social media platforms then you may be wasting your time)
  • Set It and Forget It (there is no auto-pilot when it comes to this stuff)
  • Social Media is only for Broadcasting Messages  (this mistake is repeated over and  over again by many companies)

Where’s the fourth one?  Go read the article for yourself.

5 Ways Small Businesses Can Avoid Social Media Panic

Leah B. is back again with tips for small businesses looking to get into the social media pool.  Her recommendations are spot on:

  • Have a plan (how many times have you seen companies sign up for numerous platforms without a tie in to their existing marketing plan)
  • Take small steps at first (very true – it takes time to build up a following and more importantly foster trust among that following – view this as a part of a long term approach and not some quick scheme)
  • Be flexible (if devising a plan on your own, it may take some time and experimentation to find the right venue for your audience which in essence means your efforts may be better suited with one social media tool than another)

View the full article here

10 Stages of Social Media Business Integration

Brian Solis does a brilliant job of defining the steps needed to meld social media to a business marketing plan.   If a company chooses to skip over Stage 1 (Observe and Report) it can show in a really bad way.

Read the article for yourself

20 Tools for Tracking Social Media Marketing

Like  Merle says:   “Participating in social media doesn’t take a lot of money, but it is very time consuming and businesses want to know that all of this investment in time is paying off.”  Twenty different, but useful sites are listed with brief descriptions on what they do.  Be sure to check out BackTweets.  Read the entire article here.

30 Tips for Using Social Media in Your Business

Printed in Inc. Magazine, April Joyner provides useful & practical tips on how companies can use social media to stand out and shine.  She includes tools and examples of each tip that really resonate.  Arguably a social media marketing primer for small business this is an excellent piece that is worth reviewing several times before jumping into the social media water.  Read the entire article here.

So there you have it!  An aggregated list of myths, ways, stages, tools & tips for social media marketing.  Take the ones most useful to your business model, fuse them to your marketing strategy and get started.  Which ones do you think apply most to your business?