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« May 2009 | Main | July 2009 » Measuring The ValuePosted by Tony Morse on June 17, 2009 at 12:43 PMLast week we met with a combined group of finance and marketing executives to discuss the value of financial and marketing communication investments. Originally inspired by a finance exec asking about the "ROI of Marketing," the discussion during the SlideShare presentation below focused on:
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Facebook Launches Vanity URLs - Do you need to grab your brand's name?Posted by Jason Swartz on June 10, 2009 at 2:36 PMBy now, your organization probably has one or more Facebook profiles or fan pages. Here's some important news from the site: Currently, Facebook-profile URLs are long and contain many parameters. For example, John Doe's URL might read: www.facebook.com/.php?id=123456789 Beginning Friday, Facebook members (including businesses) will be able to choose a "vanity" URL, providing an easier way to share your profile and allow people (and search engines) to find you. For example, John Doe's new URL might read: www.facebook.com/johndoe What to Do If your company has a Facebook profile or fan page, you should take advantage of your own vanity URL - both for branding purposes and to prevent someone else from hijacking your company's name. Facebook has provided businesses the opportunity to do this ahead of the launch. Just fill out this form and someone from the Facebook team should be in touch with you. A more detailed overview of this topic can be found on the Facebook blog. Ultimately, unique/custom URLs go beyond Facebook making your Web properties more memorable and findable and giving users an idea of who you are and what you're about. In a cluttered world of over 100 million Web sites, this can be a small differentiator with a big impact. Did you hear that? Me, too.Posted by Tony Morse on June 5, 2009 at 3:37 PMIn a recent post I shared how a few Tweets about a situation with Amazon demonstrated that people are listening. In the B2B marketing world, similar things are happening on LinkedIn. This week, one of our clients announced a relationship with a leading airline and several of our team shared the news through our social networks. One team member shared an article in a LinkedIn group. That led to a discussion and an opportunity for our client's CTO to correct a misperception about their technology. The discussion piqued the interest of a researcher who offered to include our client in an industry report. More exposure. More street cred. So, what are the valuable lessons here? • Sharing articles on a social network can create incremental (or even exponential results). What are other lessons to be learned here? What do you think you will do differently? Interesting bits from PRSA Counselors Academy #CA2009 so farPosted by Matt Kucharski on June 1, 2009 at 11:56 AMAttending the Public Relations Society of America Counselors Academy Spring Conference -- so far some really good content. A couple of tidbits:
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