What excites me about Ann-Mary is how convinced she already is of the power of blogging and social media in today’s small business culture. Because she’s also a Public Relations professional, she knows how vital relationship skills are in driving a business’s marketing efforts. Ann-Mary is exactly the kind of woman I wrote about in “Generation and Gender Gaps: Outbound vs. Inbound Marketing” — the fact that she’s from an older generation that’s accustomed to traditional forms of marketing and advertising doesn’t hold her back from jumping into the realm of social media and blogging, because she’s already attuned to the importance of building and nurturing relationships simply by virtue of her gender (I hope this doesn’t get me branded as sexist!).

New England Multimedia uses social media and blogging to build reciprocal relationships and educate prospects
Still, even without using every tool at my disposal, and spending too much time on one thing and not enough on another, the impact blogging and social media have had on New England Multimedia has been dramatic, most notably for the relationships we’re building with people in our target market. We’re seeing relationships become leads, and leads become conversions, in ways that simply aren’t possible without these platforms.
How about you? How are you seeing relationship skills, social media and blogging change the landscape of marketing and PR?
Note: Because I want your comment to stand, please read our simple comment policy before replying! Thank-you!
Michelle handles all Social Media for New England Multimedia. You can contact her by email, on our Facebook, or on our Twitter.
We’ve Come A Long Way, Baby!
Saturday, I watched a truly visionary video created in 1969 about the future of personal computers, long before anyone ever owned one. Watching the actors primitively demonstrate online purchases, bill payment, banking, and more, reminded me of just how far my generation — I was born in 1963 — has come. We’ve accomplished all that was imagined, and more.
A second video created in 1993 about a new thing called “The Internet” made me realize how fast everything has unfolded in recent years. It seems we’ve always had the internet, but in 1993, the possibility of talking to people around the world using a keyboard was almost too much to believe.
I wondered if the brilliant minds who had imagined these science fiction hopes were ridiculed and laughed at, if their parents rolled their eyes and told them they’d never make a living if they didn’t learn a trade, if their peers thought they were crazy and made fun of them, and if they had to push through and persevere through the naysayers trying to throw cold water on their ideas.
New England Multimedia’s founder and creative director, Scott Quillin (my husband), and our illustrator/graphic designer, Christa (our daughter), are creative visionaries, while I’m a logical, methodical thinker who has to be careful not to dampen their enthusiasm! Yes, I’m accused of that, and often. Thankfully, we complement one another more than not.
Marketing and advertising in 2010 owes a debt of gratitude to the world’s creative visionaries, especially those who foresaw the advent of personal computers and the “world wide web.” So much has changed in such a short period of time, because they had the courage to persevere despite the hardships of seeing their dreams through.
Answer one of the following:
1) What excites you the most about marketing and advertising right now, in 2010?
2) Do you believe today’s internet marketing tools — blogs, social media, Google adwords, Etsy-type shops, eBay, YouTube, PPC (pay per click ads), SEO/SEM (search engine optimization/search engine marketing) — make it possible for anyone to be their own boss?
3) Do you believe the internet is making TV, radio, and print advertising obsolete?
4) How would you advise a friend who wants to market his services online? Where should he start?
5) What skills do you believe an internet marketer — whether for themselves or others — must have now?
Note: Because I want your comment to stand, please read our simple comment policy before replying! Thank-you!
Michelle handles all Social Media for New England Multimedia. You can contact her by email, on our Facebook, or on our Twitter.






Social Media Damage Control: A Case Study
By Michelle Quillin for New England Multimedia.com · Comments (5)When Unhappy Customers Start Talking
Unhappy customers can do a lot of damage
Now, a local case study on social media damage control is unfolding, as one of the Facebook discussion participants, a Rhode Island-based blogger with a blog called “I{Heart}Rhody,” recently published a negative review about a local restaurant after a bad first experience. Interestingly, Scott, Christa & I are regulars there and had had a similar experience as the blogger — and on the same day.
An Ethical Dilemma — But Only For A Moment
I started to comment the blog in agreement, but then stopped when I remembered how much damage I had seen negative social media cause for a company in the Nestle vs. Greenpeace Social Media War.
A negative review doesn't have to rule the day!
This morning, I kept my word and called the restaurant, asking to speak with the manager or owner if they had time. I was speaking with a server, who asked what the call was about, so I told her who I was and why I was calling. I explained about the blog post, the power of social media, and how to do damage control. She was very grateful, and gave me the manager’s phone number. I spoke to the manager and talked to her about the same things, and she’s contacting the owner.
Both the server and the manager were very grateful I’d called them and alerted them to the negative publicity, and both asked for the blog address so they can make things right.
So now, we wait to see how this local case study will evolve, and if they will take the advice I learned from my awesome colleagues who took part in the original discussions on New England Multimedia’s blog and Facebook Page.
Negative Publicity Can Help A Business, But…
By the way, I believe honest negative publicity, like the piece I{Heart}Rhody published, can be a positive thing for a company. It brings attention to issues a company may be ignoring or may not know about, and gives them the opportunity to address those issues. Also, when employees and management are made aware of the power that customers wield on the internet, they become more aware of customer service. Every customer is a potential critic with a keyboard waiting to publish a review.
However, I also see a terrible power that now exists, with the possibilities of extortion, revenge, dirty competition, and other unsavory uses of social media.
Ethical questions this has raised for me now:
Note: Because I want your comment to stand, please read our simple comment policy before replying! Thank-you!
Michelle handles all Social Media for New England Multimedia. You can contact her by email, on our Facebook, or on our Twitter.