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Archive for November, 2009

This Online Video Isn’t Reality TV, It’s Content Strategy

Monday, November 23rd, 2009 by Reid Williams

If you watch the video in today’s post, you could very well end up A) nodding your head along with everything Carly and Jay have to say, and B) itching for an outdoor adventure vacation of your own.

If that’s the case, too, I’m willing to bet you’re a lot like Carly and Jay, demographically speaking. And that’s no accident or coincidence. We’re counting on it.

See, with online video, it’s not enough to just shoot, edit and upload, then cross your fingers and hope you get viewers and, as a result, customers. To make sure your time and resources are well spent in producing online video, it should be done under the guidance of an informed content strategy. Here’s what I mean.

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Trying To Impact The Social Determinants Of Health

Friday, November 20th, 2009 by Reid Williams

With several recent and ongoing projects in the world of WELD, we’re looking for ways organizations can use the Internet and new technology to positively influence the quality of life factors associated with health and wellness. The good news, simply put, is that there’s great potential for these new digital platforms and channels to be applied in ways that educate about health choices, empower people to take charge of and better monitor their own health, and facilitate communication (and thus, hopefully, insight and progress) among healthcare providers and their partners.

And we’re only just getting started.

In future posts, we look forward to telling you about our work with The Center For Rural Health at the Marshall University School of Medicine and companies such as beBetter Health. But today, we hope you’ll take a few minutes to watch the accompanying video and learn about REACH West Virginia.

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So, Is It OK To Sell On Social Networks?

Thursday, November 19th, 2009 by Reid Williams

Razorfish Graphs On Social Network Brand EngagementThere’s an ongoing debate here at the WELD Global Headquarters about whether people who sign up for online social networks really want to receive sales messages. We know that social media users readily interact with businesses and brands just like their friends, but do they actually buy products and services as a result of that?

This is a pretty critical question — especially if you’re in a business like ours, recommending and executing digital marketing strategies such as, say, getting a client’s organization active on Facebook and Twitter.

So, on the one hand, there’s success to be found in marketing where the crowd gathers — but not if the crowd is explicitly gathering someplace where they expect to be free from marketing messages. That’s the concern on one side of the debate, anyway.

Fortunately, there are researchers attempting to resolve this debate. What concerns me, however, and what became the impetus for this post, is the possible hyperbole used in reporting the results of this research. Anything seem odd (or just plain wrong) about these charts shown here?

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You Can Keep Up With WELD On Flickr

Friday, November 13th, 2009 by Reid Williams

WELD Flickr Tag Cloud

It’s been a flurry of activity in WELD-world lately, with numerous fascinating video productions, presentations and digital marketing campaign launches. The activity has taken us all over our beautiful Mountain State, not to mention trips to great destinations like Pittsburgh and New York City.

If you’re curious about the corner of the world we’re exploring at any given moment, you can keep up with the WELD photostream on Flickr.

We take a lot of pictures and shoot a lot of video in all our myriad digital marketing projects for clients. In addition to the campaign work, we try to take photos whenever we can to show:

Join Us For A Webinar

Monday, November 9th, 2009 by Reid Williams

How can West Virginia companies use social media to reach more customers? Can social media help Mountain State enterprises achieve their business objectives? Is all this Facebook-and-Twitter hubbub all that it’s cracked up to be?

If you’ve asked these questions of yourself or your marketing director, then we just might have some answers for you.

We’d like to cordially invite you to a Mountain State Marketers webinar, from noon to 1 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 16. This webinar will feature Beth Gill, marketing director for ACE Adventure Resort, and Mike Pinkerton of the Hatfield-McCoy Trail System — two of West Virginia’s largest outdoor enterprises. Both will speak and answer questions about how they have used social media as part of their marketing strategy.

We’ve got about half the seats left, as there is a good bit of interest in this topic. If you have questions or would like more information on the webinar, email jeff@mythologymarketing.com or brandon@weldtheweb.com.

Thanks, and look forward to meeting everyone there.

Looking Good Or Working Well? Which Means More For A Website?

Friday, November 6th, 2009 by Reid Williams
Image by Capture Queen (TM)/Flickr Creative Commons

Image by Capture Queen (TM)/Flickr Creative Commons

Have you ever found a website that upon first impression immediately struck you as, well, beautiful, but then when you started trying to actually use it or trying to find some information within those pretty pages, your impression of the website soured?

The results of a study at the Software Usability Research Laboratory at Witchita State University indicate that type of experience isn’t really that common, after all.

In fact, it seems pretty pages go a long way to determining a person’s positive perception of a website, whether the site works well or not.

“The visual appeal of an interface appears to play a role in the user’s rating on perceived usability,” say study authors Christine Phillips and Barbara S. Chaparro.

But if we’re going to believe them, we have to see how they define what’s usable, and how they determine a website is appealing.

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