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    How to Learn Social Media Marketing in 2 Minutes a Day: A Free Social Media 101 Email Course

    Thursday, May 21st, 2015

    We’re quite keen to always be learning new things at Buffer—new social media strategies, new languages, new skills and experiments. And we love learning together—with each other and with you.

    One area that we’ve been fortunate to gain some knowledge and experience is with social media sharing, which can be a big one for those who are eager to get involved but not quite sure where to start.

    We’d love to help people get started with social media.

    We’d love to help with social media marketing, from square one.

    Our newest idea: A seven-day email course that you can subscribe to for a lesson each day—each one just two or three minutes to read—on the very basics of social media marketing.

    We’d love for you to join, try, and learn with us!

    Buffer email courses - Social Media 101

    Learn Social Media in 2 Minutes Per Day

    It’s been so fun sharing social media content with you all here at the Buffer blog and learning what might be most valuable for you.

    We’ve put together our best tips for getting started with social media.

    7 emails, 7 days, 7 short lessons about all the basics of social media marketing.

    Each email is a two- or three-minute read at most (with some easy options to dive deeper into full blog posts and resources).

    You can sign up for the Social Media 101 course for free and send the link along to friends, coworkers, or clients.

    button

    The email course is free for everyone. If you’re a current Buffer user (thanks!), you can go there to sign up now. If you’re not yet a Buffer user, we’d love to have you join us, too.

    Subscribe for free.

    Seven days of social media: What you’ll receive

    We’d love to give you a peek at what this course covers. Here’s an overview of the seven emails sent in seven days.

    1. How to choose a social network
    2. How to customize your social media profile
    3. Establishing a voice and tone for your social media posts
    4. The ideal time and frequency to post on social media
    5. Social media analytics
    6. How to schedule, engage, and listen on social media
    7. A free social media marketing kit

    A sample email: What to expect

    We count it as quite the privilege to be invited to your inbox, and we’d love to give you as much info as necessary to help you choose whether this email course is right for you. Sometimes, it’s quite nice to get a sample of what you might be subscribing for.

    Here’s a look at the email for Day Six of the Social Media 101 course.

    Email Courses example

    Full transcript: 

    Reading time: 2 minutes

    So many social media channels. So little time.

    This is one of the chief improvements we aim to tackle with the way we experiment with workflows and strategies.

    We’d love to get the most out of the time we spend on social media. Our best tip for doing so is to schedule your posts and to work in batches. 

    There are so many different social media platforms. You can and should post the same content on each platform, but it takes a long time! Plus, the content needs to be customized for each platform.

    You could go to each site, one-by-one and post each update, pulling away from what you may be currently doing in order to post at the best time — a double whammy on your time and productivity!

    Scheduling is the secret weapon for consistent, excellent sharing, day after day.

    Tools like Buffer allow you to create all the content and updates that you want to, all at once, and then place everything into a queue to be sent out according to whatever schedule you choose.

    One thing that goes hand-in-hand with scheduling is engagement – jumping into the social media channel directly to interact and share with the audience.

    Engagement is a great balance for automation.

    When people talk to you, talk back. Set aside time during your day to followup with conversations that are happening on social media. These are conversations with potential customers, references, friends, and colleagues. They’re too important to ignore.

    One way to stay up on all the conversations that are happening around you and your company is to create a system for listening. Tools likeMention will send you an alert every time you’re mentioned online, and you can rely on custom searches and email alerts for mentions on specific networks, too.

    Further reading: What’s the best way to spend 30 minutes of your time on social media?

    These are the next-level tips that the social media pros use! If you’ve made it this far, you’re rocking your social media strategy. :)


    Today’s action item: Sign up for a social media management tool. Create mention alerts via email or Mention.

    Tomorrow’s email: A free social media marketing kit!


    Grateful to be sharing with you!

    We’re excited to try out this new experiment with email courses and to provide as much value as possible to you and your team.

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    Is there anything we can do to make this course a  more worthwhile experience for you? 

    Add any thoughts to the comments here, or feel free to email me directly also. I’d love to hear your ideas. And I’m grateful for the opportunity to be sharing with you!

    Image sources: Pablo, IconFinder, UnSplash

    The post How to Learn Social Media Marketing in 2 Minutes a Day: A Free Social Media 101 Email Course appeared first on Social.

    Social Media Growth: The 5 Simple Strategies That Grew Our Social Traffic by 350%

    Wednesday, May 20th, 2015

    When I joined Hubstaff a few months ago to spearhead the growth of the company, I noticed we weren’t utilizing the full potential of Buffer.

    In order to increase our social media growth and take full advantage of this tool, we developed a few strategies that resulted in overwhelming success. The engagement teams at Hubstaff began to use Buffer to share engaging content at optimal times and frequencies based on real data.

    Our results? After implementing these strategies, we gained 350% more blog traffic, earned more brand awareness, received better customer interaction and ultimately got a massive increase in conversions.

    You can implement these same simple strategies in your business to boost your social media growth and gain more customers. Here are the 5 strategies that helped us with massive social media growth:

    How-we-used-buffer-to-boost-our-traffic2-1024x576

    Strategy 1: Create a long-tail strategy for your social posts

    This is one of the first and most important strategies I began with. If you only share your blog posts on social media once, you’re missing out on a lot of opportunities.

    For example, if we shared our January blog posts when they were published and then forgot about them, we wouldn’t reach audience members who just started following our social media profiles in March. You’re also missing out on reaching the bulk of your existing followers.

    A long-tail strategy for social media is when you distribute your evergreen posts across a few months, sharing with different frequencies on different social networks.

    Pay special attention to the frequency of shares, since it will determine the impact of your blog post and there are different rules for different social media channels.

    For example, you could Tweet about the same blog article two to three times in the same week, then keep the same frequency for the next two months using different post titles. The same is not possible with LinkedIn or Facebook. With Facebook’s changing algorithm, we post a maximum of thrice a day—the same goes for LinkedIn.

    The Coschedule team has done a great job of creating a WordPress plug-in that helps you in creating a schedule for your social media posts. It also integrates with Buffer so you can schedule posts directly from there.

    To get an idea of what a good social sharing schedule is, take a look at this chart. It makes a great starting point if you’re just beginning to determine your optimal post frequency.

    social media posting schedule

    Strategy 2: Determine best times to post

    I cannot emphasize this step enough. After putting a long tail strategy into place, I analyzed which times of the day were best to share and optimized our posting schedule to correspond with the most engaging hours.

    I came across a Buffer feature called Optimal Timing Tool that helps you identify the best times to share your content on social media. Optimal Scheduling is easy and accurate. Just select your social media account and input the number of times you’d like to post.

    Optimal-Scheduling

    Once you’ve done that, the tool will instantly create a chart that shows your optimal posting times.

    Optimal-Schedule-Post-Buffer

    As you can see in the chart above, the tool automatically calculated five optimal posting times based on the history of our tweets. At a glance, I can tell that our best tweets should be shared approximately at 9 p.m. daily, since that is when we have the most engagement. This is how we created our Twitter posting schedule with Buffer.

    Scheduling-Buffer

    The great thing about Buffer is you don’t have to stay connected all day to share posts at different times. It only takes 15 minutes to set up your entire social sharing schedule for a month. Hubstaff was so satisfied with Buffer that we upgraded our account to their Awesome plan. It only costs $10 a month and gives you more space to store posts.

    (Also cool: Buffer has an open revenue dashboard, which inspired us to release Hubstaff’s public revenue dashboard as well.)

    Strategy 3: Write titles and content your followers are interested in

    A free and effective tool that you can use to analyze tweets is Twitonomy. This tool identifies the tweets that got the most favorites and retweets. It also finds what time they were posted and what content was in them so you can get a general idea of when and what to post.

    Twitonomy-Most-Retweets-and-Favorites

    There are three key takeaways for the information we received from Twitonomy:

    1. As indicated by Buffer’s Optimal Scheduling Tool, Hubstaff’s followers are the most active and engaging from 7 to 10 p.m. EST. (The timestamps of the tweets above are in Indian Time—our whole team works remotely from across the world!)
    2. Our posts on startups and remote teams are getting more social following than other topics (maybe we should adjust our focus).
    3. Lists and guides are popular titles among our followers.

    These key points helped me modify our social sharing strategy and influenced a shift in content focus on our blog homepage.

    Hubstaff-Blog

    Strategy 4: Re-style your blog title content on social

    Once we began posting our blog posts multiple times, as part of our long-tail strategy, it was important to make each post uniquely engaging and exciting.

    Here are a few ideas on how you can restyle a social media post featuring the same blog article;

    1. “Did you read our recent post on <blog title>?”
    2. Quote an interesting or controversial line from the blog.
    3. “Our hottest read from last month; <blog title>”
    4. Show numbers and figures. Ex. “This strategy helped us gain X% growth” or “How we gained X customers.”
    5. State the facts. Ex. “Did you know that X% of teams across the United States don’t have…”

    The main focus is to put effort into each of your statuses, instead of just posting the blog title and a link. Spending just a little more time on your posts can go a long way for social media growth. The more people who like and share your posts, the larger your audience and the further your reach gets.

    CoSchedule has written a brilliant post on promoting your blog posts via social media and I’ve personally taken a few ideas from there to make our social sharing strategy work.

    Strategy 5: Reach out to the people mentioned in your articles

    An outreach strategy is extremely important and effective. It helps boost your posts’ reach and expand your audience. We experienced this recently when I shared one of our articles on our must-read time management blogs on Twitter.

    This was our reach when I didn’t tag any of the people featured in the article.

    twitter-AR-1

    I tweeted the same article later that day. This time I tagged one of the bloggers mentioned in the article. Her retweet helped us achieve a total reach of…

    twitter-AR-2

    A simple change made a huge difference, and helped multiply our reach by more than 10x.

    The results: More traffic, more shares, more conversions

    After implementing these strategies, we earned more traffic and brand awareness, received better customer interaction and ultimately got a massive increase in conversions.

    We did an analysis of the data a month after we started implementing the strategies. This is our blog traffic solely from our social media strategy:

    Google Analytics:

    GA-Final-Social

    You’ll notice that we had a 350% increase in our social media traffic from February 2015!

    Additionally, our articles are also being shared more and we are seeing much higher conversions. Here is a comparison of our results before and after implementing our strategies.

    social-compare-2-1024x537

    It has only been a few weeks since we started, yet we saw immediate results in our social media growth. I will be sharing more updates over the next few months on the Hubstaff blog.

    I hope these tips help make your business’ social media sharing strategy more effective—they worked for Hubstaff! Have you used any new strategies to increase your social reach? Let’s hear them in the comments!

    This article originally appeared on the Hubstaff blog. It is reprinted here with permission from Hubstaff because of the great value we think it brings to the Buffer community! 

    The post Social Media Growth: The 5 Simple Strategies That Grew Our Social Traffic by 350% appeared first on Social.

    Inverse Document Frequency and the Importance of Uniqueness

    Wednesday, May 13th, 2015

    Posted by EricEnge

    IDF content uniqueness

    In my last column, I wrote about how to use term frequency analysis in evaluating your content vs. the competition’s. Term frequency (TF) is only one part of the TF-IDF approach to information retrieval. The other part is inverse document frequency (IDF), which is what I plan to discuss today.

    Today’s post will use an explanation of how IDF works to show you the importance of creating content that has true uniqueness. There are reputation and visibility reasons for doing this, and it’s great for users, but there are also SEO benefits.

    If you wonder why I am focusing on TF-IDF, consider these words from a Google article from August 2014: “This is the idea of the famous TF-IDF, long used to index web pages.” While the way that Google may apply these concepts is far more than the simple TF-IDF models I am discussing, we can still learn a lot from understanding the basics of how they work.

    What is inverse document frequency?

    In simple terms, it’s a measure of the rareness of a term. Conceptually, we start by measuring document frequency. It’s easiest to illustrate with an example, as follows:

    IDF table

    In this example, we see that the word “a” appears in every document in the document set. What this tells us is that it provides no value in telling the documents apart. It’s in everything.

    Now look at the word “mobilegeddon.” It appears in 1,000 of the documents, or one thousandth of one percent of them. Clearly, this phrase provides a great deal more differentiation for the documents that contain them.

    Document frequency measures commonness, and we prefer to measure rareness. The classic way that this is done is with a formula that looks like this:

    idf equation

    For each term we are looking at, we take the total number of documents in the document set and divide it by the number of documents containing our term. This gives us more of a measure of rareness. However, we don’t want the resulting calculation to say that the word “mobilegeddon” is 1,000 times more important in distinguishing a document than the word “boat,” as that is too big of a scaling factor.

    This is the reason we take the Log Base 10 of the result, to dampen that calculation. For those of you who are not mathematicians, you can loosely think of the Log Base 10 of a number as being a count of the number of zeros – i.e., the Log Base 10 of 1,000,000 is 6, and the log base 10 of 1,000 is 3. So instead of saying that the word “mobilegeddon” is 1,000 times more important, this type of calculation suggests it’s three times more important, which is more in line with what makes sense from a search engine perspective.

    With this in mind, here are the IDF values for the terms we looked at before:

    idf table logarithm values

    Now you can see that we are providing the highest score to the term that is the rarest.

    What does the concept of IDF teach us?

    Think about IDF as a measure of uniqueness. It helps search engines identify what it is that makes a given document special. This needs to be much more sophisticated than how often you use a given search term (e.g. keyword density).

    Think of it this way: If you are one of 6.78 million web sites that comes up for the search query “super bowl 2015,” you are dealing with a crowded playing field. Your chances of ranking for this term based on the quality of your content are pretty much zero.

    massive number of results for broad keyword

    Overall link authority and other signals will be the only way you can rank for a term that competitive. If you are a new site on the landscape, well, perhaps you should chase something else.

    That leaves us with the question of what you should target. How about something unique? Even the addition of a simple word like “predictions”—changing our phrase to “super bowl 2015 predictions”—reduces this playing field to 17,800 results.

    Clearly, this is dramatically less competitive already. Slicing into this further, the phrase “super bowl 2015 predictions and odds” returns only 26 pages in Google. See where this is going?

    What IDF teaches us is the importance of uniqueness in the content we create. Yes, it will not pay nearly as much money to you as it would if you rank for the big head term, but if your business is a new entrant into a very crowded space, you are not going to rank for the big head term anyway

    If you can pick out a smaller number of terms with much less competition and create content around those needs, you can start to rank for these terms and get money flowing into your business. This is because you are making your content more unique by using rarer combinations of terms (leveraging what IDF teaches us).

    Summary

    People who do keyword analysis are often wired to pursue the major head terms directly, simply based on the available keyword search volume. The result from this approach can, in fact, be pretty dismal.

    Understanding how inverse document frequency works helps us understand the importance of standing out. Creating content that brings unique angles to the table is often a very potent way to get your SEO strategy kick-started.

    Of course, the reasons for creating content that is highly differentiated and unique go far beyond SEO. This is good for your users, and it’s good for your reputation, visibility, AND also your SEO.

    Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

    You Finally Achieved Content Virality! Now What?

    Tuesday, May 12th, 2015

    Posted by Isla_McKetta

    If you’ve ever achieved the holy grail of content marketing success—true virality—you know the rush of endorphins as you watch the share count climb. You’ve smiled the enormous grin when one of your friends shares that piece on Facebook without any idea that you helped create it. Maybe you’ve even felt the skin-chilling prickle when Buzzfeed picks up your content.

    Then you’ve undoubtedly experienced the heart-stopping numbness when the traffic finally stalls. Where did all the people go? Was it real? Can you do it again?

    What happens next depends on which camp you fall into. Most people either

    1. Squander that success in a haze of denial, or
    2. Rush back to their desks to copy the thing that just went viral so they can replicate the success (only to find that the Internet is already over it).

    But there is a third, better way—you can learn everything possible from this moment of greatness and turn it around to create something even more shareable next time. This third path is not easy, but it is the surest way to get you back on the road to virality. Here’s how.

    Celebrate your success

    Duh. You were going to do this anyway, but take a moment (or a day) to fully enjoy all the tweets, traffic, and accolades. This will give you energy for the next step and you’ll be all the more focused for the long road ahead.

    Analyze what went right

    Sometimes content marketing feels like throwing Velcro darts at the wall—you just don’t know what’s going to stick. But when something finally does stick, there are a lot of lessons to be learned about your audience and what might work in the future.

    For example, take this post from Organic Gardening, “7 Secrets for a High-Yield Vegetable Garden.” According to BuzzSumo, it has six times as many shares as the next most successful article from the same site.

    In fact, when looking at content that contained the word “garden,” the post had more than twice as many shares as the top post from Country Living, a magazine with about five times the circulation.

    I think we can safely call this piece a runaway success. Now let’s look at what made this article so much more viral than its top three friends.

    Title

    It’s not too much of a stretch to say that “7 Secrets for a High-Yield Vegetable Garden” is a lot sexier title than “Gardener’s April To-Do List,” “Going with the Flow,” and “Cauliflower with Peas.”

    Not only does the highly successful article contain one of those emotion words that get us all excited to click, the title actually fully describes what the article is about—passing what Ian Lurie calls the “blank sheet of paper” test.
    You’ll note that the titles listed in BuzzSumo are actually more descriptive than those on the page—next time they might want to use the more descriptive titles on the page.

    Format

    The format of these four articles is pretty basic: text with at least one related image. In fact, the to-do list article could have gone a bit farther if someone had turned it into a downloadable checklist (or at least a checklist).

    Sometimes, like when you’ve invested heavily in a flashy parallax scrolling piece, it’s easy to surmise that form contributed heavily to the success of the content. But in this case, it’s unlikely that the form of this article gave it a viral advantage.

    Length

    These four articles vary widely in length, but they conform to what you might expect from the types of articles that they are. “Go with the Flow” is more of an essay and should be longer, whereas to-do lists and recipes get less useful the longer they are.

    7 Secrets April To-Do Going w/Flow Cauliflower
    1100+ words 800+ words 1700+ words 200+ words

    I’d argue that “7 Secrets” is an exception here, in that it’s more in-depth than it needs to be—in a good way. This could be one contributor to its success.

    Topic

    Not only is the “7 Secrets” title much more clickable, the viral article also hits on high-yield gardening—a high-interest topic. Having not seen the personas for this site, I’m not sure if Organic Gardening has identified gardeners with limited space or gardeners who are trying to sustain themselves entirely from their yards as targets, but this article would be interesting to both groups (which means more excited readers to share the content).

    The to-do list article is practical and “Going with the Flow” (about water conservation) is newsworthy (although it would do a lot better if it mentioned the California drought in the intro). If you love cauliflower, perhaps you can tell me why that recipe is popular. But it’s easy to see why none of these other three articles broke through the viral barrier.

    Timeliness

    From what I can tell, the original article is actually a couple of years old. It’s just been hanging out waiting for the right moment. So goes content marketing. But the week that it went nuts on BuzzSumo was in late March—the very week I was mapping my own garden.

    That said, it isn’t the most timely of these four articles. The April to-do list is very timely (and this kind of evergreen content has the chance to get picked up again year after year) and, as mentioned, the article about water (despite being written in 2011) is on-trend with current events in California.

    Again, you’ll have to tell me if cauliflower is timeless, because I’m still not understanding the success of that recipe.

    One caveat: There’s some weirdness around the dating on this site (especially since the site re-branded in the middle of me writing this draft). If you dig into the publication date, it’s April 1, 2015, a few days after March 29, 2015 (the date BuzzSumo called its publication date). And when I first started writing this article I think I found that the page was created about two years ago (though I can no longer verify that information).

    Your lesson here is that if you do a site rebrand in the middle of assessing your content, your data will likely contain weirdness too.

    Overall quality

    This is where your spidey sense comes in, because overall quality is in many ways a combination of all the factors we just looked at along with the strength of the writing. But there’s also that je ne sais quoi factor where you have to trust your gut (don’t worry, spotting great content is easier than you think).

    “7 Secrets” really is a better article for the Internet than the other three. It’s easy to share, seems high-impact, and is a fast read. “Going with the Flow” is also a good article, especially with the storytelling angle, but the anecdotal lead-in followed by the intercontinental comparison of water management styles smacks of classic print journalism (requiring thoughtful rumination), which means it might be more appropriate or successful offline.

    Influencer name dropping

    Ego bait is a tried and true content marketing tactic. It’s not used in this article, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t a good tool to keep on hand. If I wanted this article to go even more viral, I would have put names to the two experts they cite (and then reached out to tell those experts that I was quoting them).

    The social angle

    Looking at “7 Secrets” against the April to-do list, we can immediately spot a few reasons it was roughly three times more popular on the social network. It has an active and enticing image, the accompanying text is both inspirational and asks for engagement, and the article description is, well, descriptive.

    Now, I don’t have access to the internal Facebook analytics of this site, but if I did, I’d be looking hard at trends in what times of day and days of week they find the most engagement as well as whether there was any paid promotion to see what else can be learned.

    High-profile sharers

    As you can see, except for the magazine itself, very few people who shared this article on Twitter even have more than 1,000 followers. That might not be bad for you and me, but it’s not going to cause a viral stampede.

    If you find that more recognizable folks (or even those with a lot more followers) were part of your success, it might be time to build some relationships there. You can do that either by involving them in your content creation process in the future or by reaching out when you have something new to promote.

    You don’t have to wait until something goes viral to analyze what content is succeeding and why. Get some practice now (and help yourself on the road to virality):

    Download this checklist as a template

    Now that you understand what contributes to content virality, you’re ready to try to capture that magic all over again.

    Resist the urge to imitate

    This sounds counter-intuitive, but the last thing you want to do after achieving content success is to run out and do exactly what you did last time. Why? Because the Internet craves novelty, and just like it’s completely adorable when your friend’s toddler sticks his tongue out at you for the first time, the second, third, and thirty-seventh times are increasingly less adorable (and notable).

    Instead, use all that analysis you just did of what made the piece successful to remix those elements and try something new. In the case of the garden efficiency article we’ve been looking at, I’d follow up with a profile of three influential organic gardeners who have different ways of achieving efficiency in their gardens.

    Enough about gardening already, what about some other topics like windows, water, and dessert.

    • If “DIY Craft Projects using Old Vintage Windows Doors” earned you 428k shares, avoid writing “DIY Craft Projects Using Old Vintage Bannisters” and instead think more broadly with something like “10 Best Stores in the US to Find Vintage Windows for Your Project” or “Last Minute Summer Patio Projects for Upscale Freecyclers.” The first plays with influencer marketing and the second explores a niche readership that has the potential to be very passionate about sharing your content.
    • If you’ve recently had success with “Gray Whale Dies Bringing Us a Message – With Stomach Full of Plastic Trash” (226k+ shares), skip starting a series on dead animals that are portending the end of the earth. Instead try something like an infographic that shows how much the average American contributes to the gyre of plastic in the ocean that includes tips on how we can reduce our impact. That type of content would capitalize a little on the scare tactics of the first post plus the spirit that we’re all responsible for the fate of the planet. It would also be a chance to test if posts that end with positive impacts are as shareable.
    • Or if everyone loved your recipe for a ginormous Reese’s Cup (21k+ shares), don’t be tempted to write about chocolate peanut butter pie. Rather, consider creating a series on revamped recipes for childhood favorites like an upscale Nanaimo Bar or incorporating Jello into a trifle.

    The exception

    There are times when a piece of content you’ve created goes viral even though you feel like you only took the idea halfway. Playbuzz got some really good traction (1.6 million shares) with this post:

    About a month later they followed up with this one which garnered 3.3 million shares:

    They could have taken the idea even farther with “What Sci-Fi Novel…” and “What Horror Novel…” but those get weird fast and it’s safe to say they found their peak audience the second time around by getting more general. So they stopped while they were ahead.

    Build relationships

    Viral success means that a whole lot of people just shared your content. It also means that you have a huge opportunity to connect with people who might remember who you are for the next five seconds.

    Help them remember you for the foreseeable future by reaching out now and thanking them for sharing your stuff or engaging them in conversation. Ask what they’d like to see next time or respond to their questions. Be playful and friendly (if it suits your corporate voice) and get the writer to help you with the follow-up.

    Use your success as brand leverage

    There’s no better time for PR outreach than immediately following a big viral content win. Who doesn’t want to drop a line in an outreach email like “Our latest infographic has earned 452,000 shares on Pinterest (so far).” That number might feel like a fluke, but if you can get someone from a major media outlet interested in your next piece, your future looks bright.

    Keep trying

    Capturing the zeitgeist well enough to give a post viral success is not an easy thing. But have confidence that if you’ve done it before, you have what it takes to do it again. Keep making awesome stuff. And when you’re tempted to get bummed because something doesn’t quite find its audience, instead milk that learning experience for all it’s worth.

    Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

    ​We Want Your Stories: Accepting MozCon Ignite Pitches

    Thursday, May 7th, 2015

    Posted by EricaMcGillivray

    We’re thrilled to announce the addition of a networking and Ignite-style event for attendees on Tuesday night at MozCon. For years, you’ve asked us for more networking and relaxing times, and this is what we’ve dreamed up. But we need your help!

    We want you to share your stories, passions, and experiences. There are 16—yes, 16—speaking slots. Ignite-style talks are 5 minutes in length and slides auto-advance. That’s right, there’s no going back, and once it’s done, it’s done!

    In order to encourage relaxation, none of these talks will be about online marketing. Instead, we want to use this opportunity to get to know our fellow community members better. We want to hear about your passion projects, interests, and the things that fascinate you outside marketing. Tell us about how you spend weekends making support banners for your favorite soccer team or why you mentor high school students, for example.

    The basic details

    • To submit, just fill out the form below.
    • Please only submit one talk! We want the one you’re most excited about.
    • Talks cannot be about online marketing.
    • They are only 5 minutes in length, so plan accordingly.
    • If you are already speaking on the MozCon stage, you cannot pitch for this event.
    • Submissions close on Sunday, May 17 at 5pm PDT.
    • Selection decisions are final and will be made in late May / early June.
    • All presentations must adhere to the MozCon Code of Conduct.
    • You must attend MozCon, July 13-15, and the Tuesday night event in person, in Seattle.

    If selected, you will get the following

    • 5 minutes on the Tuesday night stage to share with our audience. The event lasts from 7-10pm and will be at Benaroya Hall (where the Seattle Symphony plays).
    • $300 off a ticket to MozCon. (If you already purchased yours, we’ll issue a $300 refund.)
    • We will work with you to hone your talk!

    As we want to ensure every single speaker feels both comfortable and gives their best talk possible, myself and Matt Roney are here to help you. We’ll review your topic, settle on the title, walk through your presentation with you, and give you a tour of the stage earlier in the evening. While you do the great work, we’re here to help in anyway possible.

    Unfortunately, we cannot provide travel coverage for these MozCon Ignite speaking slots.

    What makes a great pitch

    • Focus on the five minute length.
    • Be passionate about what you’re speaking about. Tell us what’s great about it.
    • For extra credit, include links to videos of you doing public speaking.
    • Follow the guidelines. Yes, the word counts are limited on purpose. Do not submit links to Google Docs, etc. for more information. Tricky and multiple submissions will be disqualified.

    We’re all super-excited about these talks, and we can’t wait to hear what you might talk about. Whether you want to tell us about how Frenchies are really English dogs or which coffee shop is the best in Seattle, this is going to be blast! The amazing Geraldine DeRuiter, known for her travel blogging and witty ways, will be emceeing this event.

    If you’re still needing inspiration or a little confused about an Ignite talk, watch Geraldine’s talk from a few years ago about sharing personal news online:

    Like our other speaker selections, we have a small committee at Moz running through these topics to get the best variety and fun possible. While we cannot vet your topic, feel free to ask questions in the comments.

    Everyone who submits an Ignite pitch will be informed either way. Best of luck!


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