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Integrated Viral Marketing: Linking your Facebook profile with your business blog

My employer, Townhall.com is now in Facebook. To celebrate, I dusted off my old college Facebook profile, and started using it. If you have a Facebook account, make sure to click here and join the Townhall.com group!

 

Did you know you can publish your business or personal blog posts on your Facebook notes? Here are the steps (it assumes you already have a Facebook account):

  1. Go to the “Notes” section of your Facebook profile, and find the “Import” or “Import Settings” or “import blog” link on the Notes page.
  2. Grab your blog RSS feed link. Mine is http://rss.townhall.com/userblogs/josue.
  3. That’s it! You can choose to not share some posts by removing it from your Facebook notes, but once you do this, every time you publish to your blog, it will show up on your notes, and all your Facebook friends will know and see your latest post.

This is a great way to extend the reach of your viral marketing efforts. Just remember to keep in mind the different audiences.

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Internet Marketing at Pizza Hut Headquarters

I’ve been invited to give a workshop or training session on Internet marketing to the state chapter leadership of a national MBA association, NSHMBA.

The event is being held at the Pizza Hut headquarters in Dallas, which should be interestnig. I’m looking forward to doing some networking there. I will be participating in some training myself, as I am also part of NSHMBA and on the board of the Denver chapter.

I keep a Business blog for them, focused on the MBA academic community and the business community in the greater Denver metro area. You can read more of that here.

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Which domain to choose for a startup — a .net or a hyphened .com?

I found this question the other day on LinkedIn Answers, and I thought it would make a good blog post. My recommendations to all my clients has always been and continues to be for the .com domain. There are several technical and usability reasons for these.

  1. Technical: Some servers, when set up properly, will send a user who forgets to type a domain to the .com domain automatically (on browsers that have this capability).So, for example, if you had mycompany.net, and a user types “mycompany” — some browsers would be sending these users to a potential competitor.
  2. Usability: .Com is the most common and well-known domain. You don’t want to force your customers and users to remember yours because its different.Unless you manage to secure a STELLAR and MEMORABLE domain, going with the .com works best. Its possible to be successful without a .com domain — del.icio.us is one example. But, some of this is subject to luck and other factors.
  3. I would not advice using a dash or hyphen.

Usually, the challenge to choosing a domain only comes when the company name is not available in the .com domain. For these cases, I would suggest going with slogan, or catch phrase, that best brands your company.

For example, a missions nonprofit (I’ve mentioned before) targeting Latin America could not find their domain “www.gcla.com”, so they went with “www.reachinglatinos.com.”

This is the key for domain selection:

  1. Easy to spell.
  2. Easy to understand over the radio (when you don’t know how to spell it). This means no numerals.
  3. Catchy, memorable, or short and easy to remember.
  4. Ads value to the brand.

The corporate initials might be well known internally, but unless you are using it on your marketing collateral, will not ad any value to your brand. Keep it it focused and integrated with larger marketing strategy.

About using a .net, I would say it only makes sense when it ads value to the brand. For example, if your company provides networking services, or something of that sort. Otherwise, you are faced with the same challenge of users possibly forgetting the domain.

Hope this helps in your brainstorming process as you figure out the best domain for your company.

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