Updates from June, 2009

  • TweetWagon Local Business Directory Exciting New Launch

    TweetWagon 10:20 pm on May 31, 2009 | Add a comment Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , local business directory, , ,

    TweetWagon gaining steam

    TweetWagon gaining steam

    You will be able to find local businesses tweeting local deals soon! Our new local business directory is launching within 36 hours from now and we couldn’t be more excited! We hope you visit our site early and often. We hope you tell your friends about our site. But most of all…We hope you end up saving a lot of money on our site. Because when you are saving money, that means we are making money.

    I want to list three reasons why we believe TweetWagon should be a household name. Many people have not yet warmed up to Twitter. We hope to be the highway that draws them in. TweetWagon will help businesses gain popularity and make money. TweetWagon will help consumers more regularly save money at their favorite places to spend it. TweetWagon will bring more value to Twitter.

    I will deal with my second point mentioned above first. TweetWagon will help consumers more regularly save money at their favorite places to spend it.

    Actually this statement is incomplete. I need to add that we will also help consumers find new places to save money as they spend it. As we grow (with your help) we will be listing more and more local businesses across the country that will find that advertising exclusive Twitter deals locally is an effective marketing tool. The more you respond to their Twitter deals, the more they will enthusiastically embrace the idea of offering you good deals. So as you benefit you benefit more. By searching in your local area for businesses trying to earn your patronage such as florists, paper companies, spas, shoe stores, restaurants, grocery stores, dry cleaners, and mechanics, you will not only find good deals which will save you money, but you will also become aware of new businesses that you may have never known about before. This is good for you and your local economy.

    TweetWagon will help businesses gain popularity and make money. I can’t stress this point enough. It is not only free to get a basic listing on TweetWagon, but it will benefit your company greatly. How else will you make the local public aware of you and tell their friends about your quality service and products. Consumers will visit our site looking for you. You will be there waiting to have them follow you so you can offer them deals exclusive to those following you on Twitter. This will generate new customers and a local buzz about your business. When you advertise on Twitter alone you may or may not be found by those who matter most-your local customer base. But by listing with Tweetwagon, your customer base will come to you by coming to us looking for you. We automatically include a link they can click to take them to your Twitter account to follow you. We can get them to you, the rest is up to you.

    TweetWagon will bring more value to Twitter. Currently, Twitter is a great public resource for anyone to use. More and more businesses are finding that Twitter is a great place to market themselves. But there is still an undefined future, purpose, and direction to Twitter. With the emergence of TweetWagon Twitter will gain an aspect of purpose and direction to the business marketing part of its users. The more consumers and businesses meet on TweetWagon, the more they will interact on Twitter.

    Our site has been under construction for over a month. But the launch date is a day away. We are hitting the trail rolling. We hope you jump on the TweetWagon. We launch at the end of June 1.

     
  • Motivated By The Sky

    TweetWagon 9:27 pm on May 31, 2009 | Add a comment Permalink | Reply
    Tags: beauty, life, , save money, squander, wonder

    The Sky 5/31/09

    The Sky 5/31/09

    I was living my seemingly unending busy life Sunday and stepped outside to take my dog out. I was tensely aware of the short paper I have due in a class I am taking at 8:00am the next day. I was aware of all the things I needed to do for the TweetWagon site and blog to get the week started. I was aware of many other responsibilities which were mangling my appreciation for life. Then I looked up.

    I looked up and saw a vast light blue sky with some giant fluffy white, orange, and pink cumulus clouds slowly and quietly drifting by in the glow of the evening sunset. I just stared. I had a quiet voice inside me remind me that there is something to that beautiful overlooking sky that I should not ignore. But what was it?

    I stared and thought. What beauty. How lovely that we can be wrapped up in the responsibilities of life and whenever we need to we can just step outside and look up to find peaceful beauty ever looking down at us. It is a reminder that there are good things in life always waiting to be appreciated even when we don’t see them in the heat of the moment.

    Good things like cloudy skies, childhood memories, the thought of a loved one, fresh air, and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.

    Now, I could mention that by utilizing our services at TweetWagon you can save money as a consumer and have more money in your pocket with which to enjoy life, or make money as a business and be able to further enjoy life. I could mention that we should be thankful for what we have, including money, and, by using TweetWagon, you will not squander your money by paying more for products and services than you have to.

    But I think instead I will mention an article I read today on the Reuters website about a woman named Felicity Chapman. Felicity was a woman who had a need.  She needed to go back to work after the birth of her child, but also valued the freedom to only work part time to be with her child. She had a problem when she found that it was difficult to work when her availability was so limited.

    This is where the lesson of the ability to ‘look up’ at the sky and enjoy life comes in. There is a difference between someone who lives the mundane life of the status quo, never living life to the fullest nor appreciating the wonder in every breath and someone like Felicity Chapman.

    Felicity recognized her need and saw it as a marketable business idea. So instead of crying the “woe is me” tune, she became proactive and changed her situation. She started a business and created a working office space/daycare center with flexible childcare services. Moms and dads can use the office space to work while keeping their kids at the daycare in the same building. We hope to list her on our site, but that is not my main point.  I want to help motivate you to live ‘looking up’.

    Felicity symbolically ‘looked up’. She remembered that life is to be enjoyed not be enslaved by. I want to put her out there as an example that should encourage all of our readers that there is a wonderment in life that is to be enjoyed. So if there is some dream or goal that you have ignored and not pursued then sit down right now and devise a plan to pursue it. If you can’t think of any then you should start by realizing that you should have some goals to pursue. Then pursue them.

    We can live our lives looking down at our circumstances; or we can live our lives with our eyes open and ‘look up’, remembering that there is always beauty around us to appreciate, and we are squandering it if we fail to see it and behold it.

     
  • Is Twitter Truly Good for Local Business Marketing?

    TweetWagon 2:01 pm on May 29, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Business Marketing, , local business marketing, local business marketing twitter myths, myths about twitter

    Is Twitter just a fad? Does Twitter really have the potential to do great things for local businesses? We find a lot of articles out there that are all atwitter about the benefits of advertising on Twitter. (See these articles that we have recently tweeted about for examples:  How Twitter Will Win Local Search; Twitter, Local Business, and ResultsTwitter: The Killer Small Business App; How Twitter Can Help Local Business; and Twitter, social networks open new marketing channels, among others not listed here.)

    Is it really true though? We here at TweetWagon are building our website and business with the mind that Twitter is an increasingly valuable tool for local business marketing. Could it be that we have based our plans on a paper tiger? 

    Gene Marks has written an article called Beware Social Media Marketing Myths attempting to portray as a myth the idea that there is value in advertising on social networking sites such as Twitter.  Indeed, his article has gotten some notable Twitter action with more than a couple people tweeting a link to the article.  We, however, take issue with much of what Mr. Marks has asserted. 

    Let me say right now that we believe that Twitter has abounding untapped potential for local business marketing.  And TweetWagon exists to make certain that potential is realized.  My purpose here is to convince those who are apprehensive that Twitter is a valuable marketing tool by debunking Marks myths claims.   

    Gene Marks addresses five so-called myths regarding the value of advertising on social networking sites: 1) Social media sites are free; 2) Social media sites are a great place to find new customers; 3) You need to be on all the big sites; 4) Social networking sites are for marketing; 5) Social networking is the future.  For the purposes of this article I will only be addressing those points which directly relate to the value of advertising locally on Twitter. 

    Let us first look at myth #1:  Social media sites are free.  Marks makes a valid point here when he highlights that advertising on sites such as Twitter are not free because they take your time.   However, he mixes messages about marketing and customer service.  It takes very little time to advertise on sites such as these.  It may take more time to engage in customer service.  However Marks treats the time it takes for customer service and advertising as the same when they are actually very different.

    If a company sticks strictly to advertising on Twitter then it can take as little as fifteen to twenty minutes per day-maybe less than that.  The more businesses utilize services like the one we offer-being listed on a one-stop Twitter local business directory (http://tweetwagon.com/c/info) the less the business has to worry about things such as spending time on their social media account for the purpose of creating buzz.  Now the business can simply put out a tweet or post and let their listing generate followers.

    Another argument Marks uses to support his first “myth” is that businesses have to respond to comments or messages on their account and post graphics.  We think these things are unnecessary.  It all has to do with how the business wants to use their social media (Twitter specifically) account.  If the business intends to advertise with the account then there isn’t much need or expectation to engage in customer service through the account as well.  Most likely the business already has a cost-effective customer service method for their business. 

    We believe businesses should be using Twitter to simply tweet about sales, exclusive deals, profound thoughts, and interesting articles.  Regarding the graphics, that should be a one-time thing.  When setting up your account you can add a graphic to your profile and you’re done.  What more graphics are necessary?When done correctly, advertising on Twitter should be the most inexpensive advertising available to businesses.

    Myth #2:  Social media sites are a great place to find new customers.  Marks states this is a myth because Myspace is used mostly by teenagers, and Facebook does not contain many people who are interacting with small businesses. 

    It is probably a good thing for a small business who wants to advertise on twitter to have a semi-current Facebook page.  This does not have to be any labor intensive thing.  Maybe it would be something that would be updated and managed once or twice a week for twenty to thirty minutes. The purpose of a Facebook page probably would not be to get a lot of new customers, but to look like you are relevant and maybe get a bunch of new fans who may spread your brand name virally. 

     Marks attempts to devalue Twitter by exaggerating a statistic that states that twitter is not keeping a lot of people consistently engaging and being active on their site.  The problem with this is that he does not account for the rapid upward trend in Twitter over the past twelve months, and he does not account for the future of Twitter. 

    The fact is that there are millions of users who have a Twitter account.  Hundreds of thousands of these users are using Twitter regularly, and all of the millions of users are looking for something valuable in Twitter.  What more value can you have in increasing activity on Twitter than to save actual money by following a local business in order to get first hand knowledge of deals and discounts.  That is what local businesses adverstising on Twitter have to offer.  And consumers are benefitting more and more from it. 

    One great example of the potential of advertising on Twitter is the story of a pizza company named Naked Pizza in New Orleans.  They began attracting followers on Twitter.  They tracked their sales for one day in April and found that 15% of their sales were from twitter followers responding to a Twitter exclusive discount. 

    The inconsistency in Marks’ second myth is obvious as he concludes.  After criticizing social media sites, especially Twitter, for having no interested consumers, he then begins to recommend various sites that are designed, function, and are made up solely of business owners and managers who “go to post and answer questions about product problems, customer service queries, saving money on taxes, generating leads, (and) hiring employees.”  Is he saying that businesses will find interested consumers on sites such as these?  I don’t think so. 

    Another problem with Marks’ argument is that he does not, cannot know how many new customers a business will acquire from word of mouth via Twitter.  If I am following a local business on Twitter and see a deal for 30% off and hear my friend is looking for a good deal,  I may pass the knowledge of the sale on to him.  Advertising on Twitter has enormous, immeasurable word of mouth potential. 

    Myth # 3:  You need to be on all the big sites.  We cannot disagree too much with Marks here.  He basically argues that you should not “spread yourself too thin.”  This seems like good advise generally.  However, we will tweak this advise a bit and say that you should have a main headquarters on one site (like Twitter) and have an account on another one or two that functions as a reference to the main site you are using.  Similar to the method of using Facebook and Twitter as mentioned above. 

    Myth #4:  Social networking sites are for marketing.  Marks presents Mike McDerment, CEO of Freshbooks, as an example of someone who finds tremendous value in using social networking sites for customer service.  Although we do not discount the value of doing this, we adamently disagree that customer service is the only good use.  We think that you need to use your social networking account for it’s intended purpose.  If this means that the purpose is to provide excellent customer service, then let that be it’s purpose. 

    The big point here is advertising and customer service are two distinct parts of your business.  You can’t have one and not the other.  So just because service can be effective when done via social networking sites, that does not affect how you will use your social networking account for advertising. 

    Myth #5:  Social networking is the future.  It is impossible to portray this as a myth unless you know the future.  We can tell you this….Twitter is still very much on the rise and still evolving.   Plus, you do not decide on how you will advertise and market today based on where your customers will be in five years.  You have to go to where they are now.  There is huge untapped potential in local businesses advertising locally on twitter.  There have been proven success stories from companies who have tried it. 

    There are services being created like  the one we offer at http://tweetwagon.com/c/info that are designed to assist the connections between local consumers and local businesses.  So we would say that there is no need to worry about where the best advertising is in the future; people are looking for good deals today, now. 

     We look at other websites that have taken root in the way in which regular consumers save money. It is in the basic instincts of consumers in a free market system to find new and effective ways to save money and get more value for their money. Thus we have the long time American staple of yard sales, garage sales, estate sales, and auctions. With the age of the internet we have the online version of things which are unmistakeable.

    There is craiglist that operates as a stand alone online classified ad system nationwide.  There is Amazon which one can find used and new items for competitive prices.  There is ebay, a true online auction site where people can buy and sell new and used items.  All of these sites are ones which exist to connect buyers who are looking at alternative buying methods as a way to save money with sellers who have a deal to offer but need a center of commerce in which to find potential buyers.

    Advertising on Twitter must be done right.  You have to figure out how to get your name out there and get followers.  But there are easy ways to make that happen.  We are finding more and more articles and success stories written every day about the value and benefits of advertising locally on Twitter.  One thing we know is true:  Twitter’s value to businesses is anything but a myth.

     
  • Making It Happen

    TweetWagon 11:15 am on May 23, 2009 | Add a comment Permalink | Reply
    Tags: entrepreneur, , success

    It so common to hear of rags to riches success stories in the media.  You even often find them regarding things like weight loss these days.  There is the Biggest Loser show where people that have been overweight their whole lives finally learn how to, indeed, even successfully accomplish, losing hundreds of pounds of weight.  It is common to hear of the regular Joe or Jane living a wasted life, addicted to spending, debt, laziness, and lack of motivation, finally “seeing the light” or “turning on a switch” where they suddenly become motivated and successful in a relatively short period of time. 

    It often seems that these people have an internal switch that has been in the ‘off’ mode and they suddenly figured out how to switch it to ‘on’.  I have often found myself asking the question, “How can they live their entire life as a certain kind of person, mediocre in life at best, and then suddenly find themselves motivated, diligent and successful?”

    I think about myself and how I have struggled with eating healthy my whole life, and how I have never figured out how to have enough self-discipline to exercise regularly.  I think about how I have always had good intentions with getting ahead financially, but have always found myself in an ever deepening hole of debt. 

    Then I took a basic physical education class at my university, and committed to start a business/website with a vision of success with my brother.  I regularly encounter obstacles in my pursuit of success in these two endeavors.  In the p.e. class, I encounter regular difficulties that one would expect a twenty eight year old man to encounter who has not exercised or eaten healthy for the past ten years. 

    Regarding the website, there is the difficulty of making time to give to the business.  And as I have fought to remain wholly committed to success in these two adventures in my life, I stumbled upon the difference between the regular Joe who never excels in that one area which he has always failed at and the regular Joe whose ’switch’ is turned ‘on’ and does finally excel.  The difference is true commitment.

    That may seem too simple but it is not.  You see, it is not like I have struggled to make time for the business because I am necessarily lazy, or because there are futile things which I enjoy pursuing even more than building a successful business. 

    No. In fact, the things that distract me from making time for our business are very good things in life.  Things like getting good grades in college classes and spending quality time with my wife and son, loving them and serving them on a daily basis.  However, I came to a realization that if I want to be a regular Joe who turns into a successful Joe then I have to be truly committed to that which will make me successful.  Once I am truly committed then I will make the difficult sacrifices in my daily life that I need to make to be successful.

    Of course success can be defined in many different ways.  And so I will qualify what I mean by the word success by defining it as: every possible way one can be successful in this life.

    The difference between the regular Jane who never succeeds and the regular Jane who figures out how to turn the switch to on is that the latter Jane is truly committed to getting that switch turned. 

    Once she is truly committed then she forces herself to make time for the things that she needs to make time for in order to be successful.  If that means she wants to be a successful mother, then she forces herself to care for and spend quality time with her children, planning out each day how she can invest in their life.  If success means she wants to lose thirty pounds, then she researches what kind of food she should be eating, what kind of exercises she should be doing, and writes out a plan and schedule of how she will execute her weight loss. Then each day she chooses to execute that plan.  The difference with successful Jane or Joe is that they every day they choose to invest in their goal to be successful.

    So now I ask you…What are your goals for success?  What things in your life do you see others around you succeeding at that you wish you could but don’t believe you could also succeed at.  Do you want to grow your business?  Do you want to lose weight?  Do you want to be debt free and have a cash reserve to use at your own discretion?  Do you want to go to college?  Change careers?  Run for political office?  Invite your neighbors over for dinner?  Be more devoted to your religion? 

    The thing that is stopping you from being successful is not your inability to do those things, but your lack of being truly committed to them.  You have to choose to define yourself, not let your past or your friends, family, and enemies define you.  The switch is simpler to turn on than you think.

     
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