Tag Archives: Twitter

Save Katie a Seat, Oprah!

Is there anything you feel so passionate about that you would put everything you have — heart, soul, time, and imagination — into making it happen?

Like you want it really, really badly?  Like you wake up thinking about it, go to bed scheming to get it, and all the sudden, you’re making YouTube videos about it in your car on the way to work?

Yeah, like that badly!

If you’ve ever felt like that, then you’re going to love my friend Katie.

She likes Oprah.  Okay, LOOOOOOOOVES Oprah.  Katie feels like her life has been so positively influenced by Oprah that she absolutely MUST see her live.  Yesterday, she launched her own grassroots campaign to make it happen!

Check Out Her Social Media Campaign!

Feel her passion?  Pass on the word. Like her Facebook page.  Help this woman get a seat (or two) for Season 25!

Katie’s Mission in Her Own Words

My name is Katie Lance and I am a HUGE Oprah fan! It has been a life long dream of mine to get ticket to the Oprah show. I have tried everything – emailing the show, calling, checking the website for open reservations, submitting ideas… just about everything! Now that it is the LAST season – it is time for drastic measures!

It is my hope through social media – my videos, tweets, and Facebook posts that I will catch the eye of Oprah and/or her team so I will get a chance to see Oprah’s show before the end of Season 25. Please spread the word – save me a seat Oprah!!

Award

Most Creative Way to Get Oprah Tickets – 2011 :-)

Ready to join forces and sell your art? Live in the Bay Area?

Then this is a must-attend opportunity for you!

Join us for a series of 4 strategy sessions about PR and selling, specifically for artists who are ready to show and sell their work.

Branding and Selling Your Art  – Strategy Workshop (4 weeks)

@ New Pieces Quilt Store and Gallery
MARCH 2011 – Tuesdays… see details below*
Facilitated by Cyn Long  ←— that’s me
www.CynWorks.com and www.xoxoquilts.com

If you have a product, a brand, and a web presence (or are in development on these) and want to brainstorm on the most effective ways to sell your art, these sessions are for you!

  • Some of it will be fast-paced.  You’ll want to be internet savvy.
  • Some of it will be in-depth.  You’ll want to take notes, do research, and share your findings.
  • The benefit?  Other people will be sharing their research, saving you hours and hours of time figuring things out for yourself.

Plus, you’ll have 9 other creative brains focused on the same concerns at the same time… powerful camaraderie!

Bring:

  • Your laptop (wireless internet is available)
  • A sample of your product in its packaging
  • Ideas you have about PR (success and failure stories are both welcome!)

Some of the topics on the 4-week agenda include:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flickr
  • Etsy
  • Social media breakfasts
  • Kickstart.com start-up funding
  • Building a database of buyers/influences
  • Constant Contact
  • In-person networking
  • How do I get people to my blog/website?
  • How do I get them to purchase online?
  • And… please bring your ideas to the table!

March 8, 15, 22, 29, 2011
Tuesdays, 4-6 PM
You must commit to being at all 4 sessions
Cost:  $40/includes all 4 sessions
Maximum of 10 people
Sign up by calling New Pieces 510-527-6779

*4 spots have already been claimed, so sign up soon if you can!

This info is so new, it’s not even on the New Pieces web schedule yet… but the workshop is a go, so call to sign up.

Social Media and My Job

My job as a branding strategist is to help my clients get really clear on what they are selling and then to help them find new customers and increase loyalty from existing customers.  That is the bare bones mission of CYN WORKS.

I meet most of my clients through my interest in (okay, honestly, “obsession with”) fabric and sewing.  I meet my clients through guilds, associations, classes, field trips, sewing groups, online critique groups, friends, and referrals.  The thing I love most about CYN WORKS is that it enables me to interact with creative people on a very honest and personal level.   We collaborate on the language and the images that define their service or product.  Often, my clients become good friends, perhaps because we are enamored with the same ideas – creativity, invention, and mastery of a skill.  We work really hard and we laugh a lot.

In our work, there is a real passion about pushing one’s personal boundaries.  I insist that my clients use social media.  There is usually a learning curve.  The tools aren’t always intuitive, they’re crowded with tons of excess information, and using them feels like it takes time away from the business of running the business.  On top of learning how to use the tools, my clients don’t always want to spend 3-5 hours a week of intense creative energy coming up with fresh ideas to talk about on their blog, Facebook, Twitter, or Linked In.

Tough, right? So here are the reasons to use it anywayIn fact, I’ll intersperse images/links to people who are social media studs/stars!

Social media is a way of communicating.  Primarily, it IS “social.”   It’s about sharing ideas, connecting, chatting, and being a good listener.

  • It’s a bar without the late nights, dirty bathrooms, or hangovers.
  • The object is to create a place for a dialog between you and someone you want a relationship with.
  • Through social media, you may be talking to a prospective client, a curator, a collector, or maybe another artist or professional you’d like to collaborate with.

So with all the benefits, why do I still get drag from clients?

What I’m realizing is, there is a disconnect between people who have a natural affinity for social media and those who do not.  People who have an affinity (like me) usually have histories of working in PR back in the old-school “press release / newspaper / beg-a-journalist-to-write-a-positive-sentence-about-your-company-and-its-products” era.  My marketing team used to sweat over crafting the perfect 300-word press release, then call the local papers, mags & biz journals to convince the editors that our news was absolutely beneficial to the community and not simply self-serving.

We would spin any event – a sale, a new employee, a new product, a training seminar, helping a neighbor, a donation to a charity, participation in someone else’s charity – just to get some press coverage with our name in the paper.  It was brutal.  Sometimes it was humiliating.  We’d spend hours to get a mention, and then the paper would misquote us or misspell a key participant’s name.  Monday mornings at the office brought a sort of dread – what could have gone wrong?  It seemed sometimes there was more planning for CYA than celebration.

Entrepreneurs who don’t have a natural affinity for social media are usually the folks who didn’t have to think about PR or advertising in their past careers.  They usually worked in operations roles, focused on making the company fiscally sound, the product exceptional, and the growth scalable.  These people are very often project- and finance-oriented.  So when they start their own businesses, they’re not accustomed to having to create a new sales pitch every day.

Because that’s what social media requires.  It means looking at your product and coming up with a new “wow,” a new angle on how it benefits the consumer, every day.

  • You have to be enthusiastic.
  • You have to be fresh.
  • Your message works best when it brings in an element of fun.

And social media has this modernist slant on commerce that you have to sell without selling.  Yes, it’s okay to broadcast a very special offer to your very special customers.  But if every message comes on sales pitch, your consumers are going to turn you off, unfollow you, and delete you from their Facebook favorites.

The tools are expanding exponentially and always changing.  A new way of communicating is invented, tested, attracts participants, becomes oversaturated, and gets discarded as it is devoured by the next new thing.  It’s exciting to figure out how to use these tools to share your business’s message with people who might help you grow!

In fact, an article I wrote about using social media to grow one’s art business was published in the most recent Studio Art Quilt Association (SAQA) Journal.  Want to read it?  Download the PDF here!

And in the meantime, ask yourself:

  • Am I using all of the tools available to help my business grow?
  • Am I embracing social media or am I getting tripped up in hesitations of my own invention?
  • If I don’t embrace social media, what methods will I use to get the publicity I need for my business?