Thursday, December 20, 2012

Is Your Social Media Branding Working?

Originally Posted: September 18, 2012
This week's blog is courtesy of Deborah Richmond

Is Your Social Media Branding Working?
 
Is your online marketing working?  How can you tell?  Do people know you exist? Can they find you online?

Here's how you can find out if your social marketing is working. It's really simple.

1. Google yourself.

When you do, does the first page show any links that lead to you?  If it does, you're doing a good job of online branding. If it doesn't, you've got more work to do.  How can you make sure you come up on page 1 on Google when you Google your name? 

2. Get more content out there.  Do any or all of the following:

Post more on Twitter.
Blog more.
Connect your blog to Facebook. 
Update your LinkedIn profile.
Create a podcast.
Make some YouTube videos.

When I Google my name or the name of my business, you will find a listing for my website. You also see listings for my podcast, my blog posts, my Facebook page, my LinkedIn profile, and my YouTube videos. 

How did this happen? I create content all the time. Every week I'm putting something out there. Google has noticed.  If someone is looking for my business on the internet, they are going to find it right away.

This type of branding works, whether you own a business or are working to have your individual name be seen more often in your industry. Get your content to show up when someone Googles your name or the name of your business.  Plain and simple.

________________________________________

Deborah Richmond, owner of TekkBuzz Marketing, a social media and lead generation company.  She consults and speaks professionally about the use of social media and strategies to magnetically attract new business. Deborah is the author of the ebook, "Pump Up Your Profits with Social Media." She can be also be found on iTunes where she hosts a podcast called "The Tekkbuzz Social Marketing Podcast". 

Monday, December 10, 2012

Agent Advice Pt 3

AGENT ADVICE
by David Petro
www.BroadwayBreakThru.com
Part 3 of 3

What Should I Expect Once I Get An Agent:

1. Agents work for you but you must work for yourself first. The work load is 30% agent and 70% yours. Your agent will help steer your career but you must drive.

2. Keep your agent updated with headshots, resumes, contact information, current performances and classes your attending.

3. It is essential your agent know when you are out of town or unavailable to attend auditions. Time is a luxury not afforded the entertainment industry. Wasting the little your agent has is your first step out the door.

4. After auditions ask for feedback. This will show your agent you are interested in improving, booking work and allow your agent to invest your development.

5. Keep lines of communication open, comfortable while avoiding desperate, unnecessary ploys for attention.