.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Tweets and notes from the tourism conference in Idaho Falls


Idaho Tourism is the first destination marketing organization to team up with PixFusion, a leader in personalized entertainment and composite imagery, to utilize its photo-personalized technology. The My ID campaign invites visitors to place themselves, family, and friends in any of seven Idaho online adventure videos. Check it out at http://www.visitidaho.org/my-id/
I did a mess of live tweeting today at the Idaho Conference on Recreation and Tourism, which is being held this year in Idaho Falls at the Shilo Inn, ending Thursday.

Why live tweeting? Because this is the 21st century, for heaven's sake, and the speakers were experts on social media. Also, I'd only done it once before and figured I could use the practice.

I have no idea whether my tweets reached a lot of people, or whether I was just making a nuisance of myself on Facebook where they appeared one after the other. You'll have to pardon me if it was the latter, but for everyone who might have missed out on the fun, here's a compilation. Let's see if there's any cohesion when compiled in one place.

The first take comes from William Bakker and Ben Vadasz of Think! Social Media:

  • "The whole point of social media is to get people talking."
  • Five levels of social media sophistication.
  • Level 1: Listen first, then respond.
  • Level 2: Somebody is doing something, but I'm not sure what. (Share remarkable content).
  • Level 3: Social media supports our marketing campaigns. User generated content benefits both parties.
  • Passionate communities share content. Work with them & they'll do the marketing for you
  • Level 4: Before you do any marketing, ask will it be shared?
  • Level 5: Set up a dialogue instead of doing a monologue.

And here are a few of Bakker's observations scribbled in my notebook and not posted online (until now):

  • "A brand is not a logo and a slogan. A brand lives in somebody's heart."
  • "If you get people talking, they'll do the marketing for you. The whole point of social media is to get people talking."

For destination marketing organizations, Vadasz offered the example of Vulcan, a small farming community in Alberta, Canada, that put itself on the map by embracing Mr. Spock (a logical thing to do.)

"It's become a Disneyland for 'Star Trek' fans," he said. "They made their destination remarkable."

"Be remarkable" when you post on the Web, he said. It's not enough to say "Like us on Facebook."
"Why should I join your page?" Vadasz said. "Am I going to get cool information? Am I going to be able to post content? Take the person to a call to action or a value add."

The lunchtime speaker was John Thornton of Google. Here are my tweets from his talk.

  • People are 1. Online 2. Hyper-informed 3. Constantly connected
  • On average, people visit 18.2 unique online sources before buying a car, 7.0 before buying dish soap.
  • Zero Moment of Truth (ZMOT): Google-ese for research period before buying decision
  • Mobile devices have become our "second brain"
  • Every day, 8 years of content is uploaded on YouTube. Richest source of content for your brand
  • 24 percent of time spent online is spent watching video. Video ad spending is only 7 percent of online ad spending
  • Social is the new water cooler. Be a part of the conversation
  • Your brand is defined by the people who are interacting with it. You don't own your brand. 77% of brand content is created by consumers

I also learned from Thornton that if I hope to regain Google's good graces I need to call 1-866-2GOOGLE and repent for suggesting (in a roundabout, satirical way, but apparently they don't have my sense of humor in Palo Alto) that people do online that which ought not to be done. I will provide no more detail, because obviously they look at everything I write and are quite willing to administer a smack-down if I get too smart-alecky.

Live Tweeting the Idaho Conference on Recreation and Tourism

In case you're wondering about all these items coming up on Facebook, I am live Tweeting the Idaho Conference on Recreation and Tourism, which is being held today at the Shilo Inn. The last two speakers, William Bakker and Ben Vadasz of Think! Social Media, had very interesting things to say. Next up: John Thornton of Google. Stay tuned.

Breakfast is served

WinCo has Entenmann's now. Not an endorsement or anything, but if you're from the East Coast you have may have developed a taste for their pastries (and added a few inches to your waistline.) Has anyone seen Entenmann's in a local store before? I don't believe I have. Anyway ...

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

McCullough named interim CEO of Greater Idaho Falls Chamber


Kerry McCullough

The Greater Idaho Falls Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors is has named Kerry McCullough as its interim chief executive officer.

McCullough has served as the programs and events coordinator for the chamber for the past three-and-a-half years. She replaces Robb Chiles, who resigned two weeks ago. While the board looks for someone to fill the position beyond interim status, McCullough will remain involved in the planning of upcoming events including, the annual golf tournament, the Independence Day parade, the Liberty Festival on the Falls and Taste of Idaho.  


Google tourism specialist to speak Wednesday in Idaho Falls


John Thornton, destination marketing specialist for Google, who will speak this morning at the Idaho Falls Shilo Inn as part of the Idaho Conference on Recreation and Tourism.
The Idaho Conference on Recreation and Tourism began today at the Idaho Falls Shilo Inn, but most of the day was taken up with meetings and presentations. The main attraction is Wednesday with an impressive slate of speakers, many of whom will be offering knowledge and advice about social media.

Having never dealt with an actual person from Google, I am particularly interested to hear the presentation from John Thornton, a destination marketing specialist for the company who advises on strategy, new media and digital advertising. Before joining Google, Thornton worked at RKG, a large search engine marketing agency in Virginia. He has extensive experience in digital marketing for the travel industry, working for resorts, airlines and travel agencies, as well as local, state and national tourism boards.

Eager to hear what he might have to say, I found this link --  http://us.sometourism.com/google-john-thornton/ -- from the Social Media Tourism Symposium last fall. A lot of what he had to say could be applied to social media in general.

“Discover your story, build your audience, deepen enagement, make better videos. Try and make … snackable content. Don’t just educate and push – listen – YouTube is actually a two-way medium. Show that you’re paying attention to the comments and reply to videos posted by the community and your credibility and view counts will rise. Be timely. Don’t respond two months later after the community has moved on.”

“Your brand is only whatever I [or others] decide your brand is. Your brand is not whatever you want it to be.”

He also offered tips for what destination marketing organizations need to do on Google+:

  • Create and verify your Google + page – put your URL in the about section, contact your Google rep to verify the page
  • 
Enable social extensions in Adwords – extend endorsements to Search and realize an average 5-10% search ad CTR uplift.
Add the Google+ badge to your site – For top sites, the G+ badge increased follwers by 38%

  • Comments are not conversations – be sure to nurture interactions and conversation as you would on other channels.

Here is a link to the full schedule: http://commerce.idaho.gov/tourism-grants-and-resources/idaho-conference-on-recreation-and-tourism-2013-idaho-falls-.aspx