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Social Media Don'ts Part 2 - Follow the Leader
16 years ago

Social Media Don'ts Part 2 - Follow the Leader

insight

Follow-the-leader. We all do it, both individually and corporately.

What I want to communicate through this post can be pretty much summarized in the following quote from an article regarding how Microsoft used the Farmville application on Facebook to more than triple it's fan-base on that property:

“Even as advertisers rush to Farmville for a virtual land grab, it’s critical to remember that the campaign worked in part because Bing was first to try it. There is great value in being the first company to test an advertising strategy in any social medium; if [another new application] becomes cluttered with more product placements, users will turn away. In a word, we trust our friends who show us cool things; we don’t trust the friends who are always trying to sell us something.”

It is so popular for people to see a great idea online and to go and copy it hoping for the same or similar results. This is especially true of ministries. But, while “imitation is the sincerest form of flattery” (Charles Caleb Colton), it doesn't typically reflect well on the copy-cat.

In fact, it looks lazy, uninspired and contrived. None of these being values that we hold high in any relationship, so why would it be any different online?

Andrew VanderPloeg
Andrew VanderPloeg Guest Blogger, Consultant

Andrew served at Bark for over 20 years before recently taking over the role of Vice President of Marketing & Communications at ShareWord, one of our favorite organizations.

The Silver Bullet View All Social Media Don'ts Part 1 - Knee-jerk Reactions

The Allure of One-Size-Fits-All Messaging

The Allure of One-Size-Fits-All Messaging

Tom Ward insight

There's a reason most organizations default to one-size-fits-all messaging: it's efficient. One campaign, one audience, one set of materials. You cover the most ground with the least effort.

And there's a comforting logic to it. More reach should mean more response, right?

But reach isn't resonance.

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You May Have an Alignment Issue

You May Have an Alignment Issue

Ray Majoran insight

I’ve been in this business for more than 30 years now, and when you do things for long enough, you identify patterns. Today I want to show you a pattern that I’ve seen continually repeat itself.

A ministry starts to feel stuck, and their immediate assumption is that they need a marketing overhaul.

Sometimes that means a new website. Sometimes it means more social media, better design, stronger campaigns or an entirely new brand image. More recently, I’ve watched ministries try to jerry-rig AI into absolutely everything.

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The Measure of a Captain

The Measure of a Captain

Ray Majoran real stories

In August 1914, as Europe moved toward war, Ernest Shackleton sailed from Britain with a crew of 27 men aboard the Endurance. His ambition was immense: to become the first to cross Antarctica from sea to sea.

By January of the following year, that ambition had been arrested by the Weddell Sea. The ship became trapped in pack ice, then drifted helplessly for months until the pressure of the frozen ocean crushed its timbers and sent it to the bottom. The expedition that had set out to make history could no longer accomplish the thing it had been formed to do.

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