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Extend Your .COrporate Footprint with a .CO domain

June 3rd, 2010 ::

Many of us aspire to be entrepreneurs one day and many of you reading this may be just starting out or veterans at this already. What you all can agree on is that in order to take a company from small to big a critical element is extending its footprint and protecting its brand.

The Corporation Needs Its Brand Protected

We talked in a previous post about how a strong brand starts with a strong name. Of course, one of the first things you do when you start your business is to come up with a name. In the late 1990’s when the web was growing rapidly, people were adding a .com to the end of their company to show how forward thinking and hip it was because they got the “Internet thing”. Over time everyone expected you to have a .com for your top level domain (TLD) extension. However, over the last 15 years many of the .com addresses have been snatched up, there is a new opportunity on the horizon – the .CO domain.

We came across and interesting study on the .CO web site that talked about a study of 600 past and prospective domain registrants. It was performed by Penn, Schoen and Berland, a global market research firm, rand they learned that .CO domains in the second level are:

  • Easy to remember, simple to use, and easy to understand
  • More than 75% of respondents associated .CO with ‘company,’ ‘corporation,’ or other commercial endeavors—but .CO is not confined only to these meanings

Simply put, .CO is global, recognizable and credible, and therefore highly desirable in this competitive business environment.

Extend Your Corporate Footprint with a .CO Domain Name

While you might already have your .COM name secured, it important that you extend your corporate footprint to protect your brand and work well in a commercial or business environment. We have mentioned in previous posts that as you grow your company you will need to protect your name and multiple domain extensions is one primary way. It is important to note that as of this writing, if you have a corporate name/brand, the Global Sunrise is still going on but the window is closing fast. By June 10, 2010. During the Sunrise period holders of eligible registered trademarks have the right to apply for the .CO domain name corresponding with their trademark before the registration of domain names opens to the general public.

Take Your .COrporate Footprint from Small to Big with a .CO Domain Name

So are you ready to go from small to big? We encourage you to check out the Network Solutions .CO site more information about submitting your trademark application and the .CO domain name in general.

To support the launch of the .CO domain globally, the site Pitch.CO has a contest asking for your best business idea pitch and you can win $50,000. To find out more, check out the Pitch.CO site.

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Use a .CO domain to .COnnect with your customers

May 28th, 2010 ::

We work hard every day to create products and services that provide value in people’s lives. Sometimes these products and services do not always meet customer expectations. This need to provide customer service to answer questions, deal with complaints and get feedback on how to improve is part of the role of customer service.

Customer Service is a Way of Life

Every person in a company should be involved in customer service so that the customer-centric thinking is a way of life for a company’s culture. Providing stellar customer service takes hard work and the passion to ensure that people love your products. Nothing is more powerful than customers who have nothing to gain talk about and become evangelists for your product/service. You can see this at places like Apple, Zappos or Nordstrom.

Many of us desire to create companies that have that kind of impact and following. If you do, then would agree that in order to take a company from small to big requires customer service being a way of life.

.COnnect with Your Customers using a .CO Domain Name

One thing you can do to forge the path of stellar customer service is to create a site dedicated to listening and communicating with customers. The .CO is a unique opportunity for businesses to use this newly available global domain name to do just that.

Simply put, .CO is global, recognizable and credible, and therefore highly desirable in this competitive business environment.

Even if you have your .COM brand, it important that you protect and extend your brand in a commercial or business environment. As you grow your company you will need to protect your name and multiple domain extensions is one primary way. In the event you have your trademark in your country of origin (you should do this if you haven’t already) you can participate in what is called a Global Sunrisewhich is from April 26, 2010 – June 10, 2010. During the Sunrise period holders of eligible registered trademarks have the right to apply for the .CO domain name corresponding with their trademark before the registration of domain names opens to the general public.

Take Your .COmpany from Small to Big with a .CO Domain Name

So are you ready to go from small to big? We encourage you to check out the Network Solutions .CO site more information about submitting your trademark application and the .CO domain name in general.

To support the launch of the .CO domain globally, the site Pitch.CO has a contest asking for your best business idea pitch and you can win $50,000. To find out more, check out the Pitch.CO site.

Get Your Biz On! First Ever Women Grow Business Bootcamp this June in DC

May 21st, 2010 ::

I am happy to share the news that Shonali Burke, Editor of Women Grow Business has put together the first-ever Women Grow Business Boot Camp for women entrepreneurs in the DC metro area.

The goal according to Shonali is to “bring the smarts of our online community offline – to help you grow – or start – your business”.

Did you know that according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s last report (2006), the number of women-owned businesses in the U.S. grew 20 percent between 1997 and 2002. In fact:

  • Women owned nearly 30 percent of “nonfarm” businesses in the U.S.;
  • Fourteen percent of women-owned firms employed more than 7.1 million people; and
  • Wholesale and retail trade accounted for 38.3 percent of women-owned business revenue.

One thing’s for sure from this data: we women are bent on rocking business!

Event Details!!!

The first-ever Women Grow Business Boot Camp, which will be held from 8:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, June 19, in downtown DC.

If you’re a woman entrepreneur in the DC area (or want to be one), I hope you’ll attend this half-day, FREE workshop where you’ll hear from women business owners, many of whom contribute to and/or have supported Women Grow Business since its inception.

I mean, it’s not every day you get a chance to meet Kathy Korman Frey aka @ChiefHotMomma and our keynote speaker (W00T!), as well as powerhouses like Marissa LevinPatricia FrameShana Glickfield and many, many more.

What you’ll learn

Speakers will share their experiences in growing their businesses, and after the keynote, you’ll split into four breakout groups to learn more about four key areas of growing your business:

  • Money, Honey: the financial and infrastructural side to your business
  • Legal Eagle: the legal, IP and related issues we need to be aware of
  • What’s the Buzz?: marketing your business, including using PR and social media
  • Are You Being Served?: defining, reaching and retaining your ideal customer

We’re going to repeat these tracks after a short break, so that you can move to another group and learn about another area (and the speakers will change as well).

So by the end of the workshop, you should come away feeling empowered, armed with practical tips, and have done a ton of networking… at least, that’s what we hope you’ll come away with.

It’s on a Saturday, so hopefully that will make it easy for you to carve the time out of your busy schedules. And did I mention it’s FREE? Thank you, sponsors Network Solutions and the Intellectual Property Group and Diversity Committee of Steptoe & Johnson LLP.

Sign up!

You can register here, and do share the word with those you think would be interested… and maybe we can even come up with a flash mob of our own. Whadja say?

About Women Grow Business

Network Solutions-hosted blog community, Forbes named Women Grow Business one of the 20 Best Marketing and Social Media Blogs By Women earlier this year. Rather than rest on our laurels, we hope the Women Grow Business Bootcamp will provide a rich learning environment for women business owners… and those who want to join their ranks.

Building Your .COmmunity with Your New .CO Domain

May 21st, 2010 ::

With the advent of social media, companies are looking to engage their customers in two-way communication. The most basic way to do this is to build a community around their products and services. In the past people created a sub-domain like “forums. or community.” to direct people to their community, with the new .CO domain you can centralize all of that while still leveraging your company brand.

Building a business from the ground up takes hard work and the passion to see your vision turn into reality. Many of us aspire to be entrepreneurs one day and many of you reading this may be just starting out or veterans at this already. What you all can agree on is that in order to take a company from small to big a critical element is building a strong community.

Strong Communities need a Strong Presence

As your company grows, so does its customer base and the need to communicate with them. This means opening up various communications channels and listening posts to have conversations with customers and allow customers to talk to one another.

The .CO is a unique opportunity for businesses to build a centralized community hub and here are a few examples of this in action:

  • Centralized content from all over your company into one place customers can discover each other and have conversations
  • Using .CO as your portal for all things community
  • Adding in all forums and various news/blog feeds so it becomes a hub for everything happening in and around your business

Build Your Community with a .CO Domain Name

Even if you already have your .COM for your company, you should look at leveraging a .CO domain name for your centralized community site. As your company grows your customers will look to know more and be able to communicate their issues and talk with fellow customers. Using a .CO domain as the community site will help you

Take Your .COmpany from Small to Big with a .CO Domain Name

In the event you have your trademark in your country of origin (you should do this if you haven’t already) you can participate in what is called a Global Sunrise which is from April 26, 2010 – June 10, 2010. During the Sunrise period holders of eligible registered trademarks have the right to apply for the .CO domain name corresponding with their trademark before the registration of domain names opens to the general public.

So are you ready to go from small to big? We encourage you to check out the Network Solutions .CO site more information about submitting your trademark application and the .CO domain name in general.

To support the launch of the .CO domain globally, the site Pitch.CO has a contest asking for your best business idea pitch and you can win $50,000. To find out more, check out the Pitch.CO site.

Finding Nirvana – Book Review of "The Zen of Social Media Marketing" by Shama Hyder

May 14th, 2010 ::

So are you a “Zen Master of Marketing”? Most likely, no. However, I am confident that after you sit down and read “The Zen of Social Media Marketing” by Shama Hyder Kabani you will feel like you have got a handle on this “social media thing”.

Learning how to get social media to “ACT” the way you want it to

She starts the book with the required basics to lay a foundation for even the newest of social media practitioners. What she then does is lay a foundation for how you approach social media in a 1-2-3 phase methodology called “ACT”. “ACT” stands for “Attract, Convert, Transform” and that forms the core of how you should look at each tool in your social media marketing toolbox. If it can’t help you do that and you don’t have a plan to make it happen then you need to revisit why you are using that tool and get a plan of action together.

Who is this book really for?

From Shama’s introduction she says “if you are responsible for marketing in any shape or form, this guide is written for you. Perhaps you are a small business owner responsible for attracting your own customers or clientele, or perhaps you’re an employee at a huge firm who is responsible for your company’s social media efforts. Maybe you want to get the word out about your nonprofit. It doesn’t matter; the principles are all the same.

While I would agree with that, I would add that if you are new to social media or have just dabbled in it then this book is perfect for you. If you have been doing this for six months or more you have probably learned many of these things through trial and error. However, in each social media area she covers, there are some in-depth looks that everyone should read. I really like how she dives into the user experience and layout of these applications explaining what each thing is for and why it might be relevant or not for you and your business.

My favorite part of her “who this is for” is how she lays it out for those who the book is not for at all. She says “This guide is not for those who want to become overnight millionaires, internet marketers looking to turn a quick buck, or those looking to grow their Facebook friend count so they can spam those friends.” Love that.

There is Much to Learn and This Book Delivers

As you move through the book you will notice many real life examples and case studies from real small businesses who have seen what works and what doesn’t. That approach makes a book real. Not a lecturing diatribe like some other social media books out there nor a 50,000 fly over of major sections with the usual toolbox suspects (i.e. Twitter, Facebook, Digg). What I really like the most and what I think you will get out of this is that using social media is one part toolkit and two parts conversation/community. It is very clear that not everything will work for you and that you must find your own social media voice to create a solution that is successful for your small business. You will fail but I have saying “if you haven’t failed then really haven’t tried hard enough”.

For More Info and To Buy the Book

As someone that practices what she preaches she has a great online and social media presence for the book. You can find the web site for the book at http://zenofsocialmedia.com/

She also has provided bonus resources for those who know the secret passphrase, but you will have to buy the book to find that out. You can find the book online at all major outlets below:

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Pitch Your Idea for a new business, blog or website and Win $50,000

May 13th, 2010 ::

Pitch your idea for a new business, blog or website and you could win $50,000 and the ideal .CO web address* to make it a reality.

Recently, we announced the global launch of the .CO domain. While it has been the domain for the country of Columbia, it is now available for the first time outside of that country.

To support this launch, the site Pitch.CO has a contest asking for your best business idea pitch and you can win $50,000. Here are the details:

Pitch it

Whether you’ve got a full plan ready to launch or just a few half-baked ideas drawn on the back of a napkin, it’s time to make your pitch! Clear your calendar for 30 minutes, get ready to focus and put your best pitch forward. Don’t worry about making it perfect – just have fun and make it happen. You’ll need the following details:

  • A 60-second video or an image that will inspire

    Nothing gets people inspired like hearing a great new idea directly from you.

  • A catchy title for your idea

    Half the battle in any contest is getting people to pay attention. How will you do it?

  • A little plan

    This is where the rubber meets the road. How does your idea come to life (in 1,000 characters or less)?

  • Your ideal .CO web address

    This is your chance to get the .CO web address you really want – choose wisely.

  • Tell us about you

    Charm the voters and judges with a little story about yourself and your background.

Promote It

Once you enter the contest, use our easy promotional tools to start marketing it everywhere. Share it with your friends, update your status, tweet about it, call your relatives, tell a stranger, whatever it takes to get people to vote for your entry on Pitch.co! The top 30 vote-getters will be advanced to the finals where they will join a maximum of 8 pitches selected by the judges. Voting ends on June 14, 2010 at 11:59pm EST.

Win It

Grand Prize (1)

$25,000 in cash
$25,000 in web design/development services
1 ideal .CO web address to build it on*

Runner Ups (5)

$500 in cash
1 ideal .CO web address to build it on
*Subject to the .CO Launch and Registration Rules

Enter to Win!

So let’s get started! Go to http://pitch.co/submit or click on the button below. Good luck!

Disclaimer: Any .co domain including those mentioned in your contest entry may be registered by any member of the public after the sunrise period ending on June 10, 2010.Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Small Business Use of Social Media up 200% since 2009 says, Small Biz Report.

May 7th, 2010 ::

Social media adoption by small businesses has doubled from 12 percent to 24 percent in the last year was one of the big take aways from the most recent edition of the Small Business Success Index™ (SBSI). This third wave of the report, sponsored by Network Solutions® and the Center for Excellence in Service at the University of Maryland’s Smith School of Business reports that small business are mainly using social media to identify and attract new customers.

Social Media is a Call to Action and not just a Buzzword

If you use social media in any way for your small business you are probably saying “heck yeah” to that confirmation which you have known about for a while. Many small businesses however have been starting to figure this out and in 2009 the buzzword was also a call to action.

The report quotes Connie Steele, Director at Network Solutions, “Tough market conditions mandate small businesses to think and act creatively to sustain themselves”. “Social media can be the best friend for small business owners who constantly seek new ways to attract new customers and retain the ones they have at a relatively low cost.”

Also from the report, the SBSI found that nearly one out of five small business owners are actively using social media in their business. Small businesses are increasingly investing in social media applications, including blogs, Facebook® and LinkedIn® profiles. The biggest expectation small business owners have from social media is expanding external marketing and engagement, including identifying and attracting new customers, building brand awareness and staying engaged with customers.  Sixty-one percent of the respondents indicated that they use social media to identify and attract new customers. Listen to a podcast on how small businesses are leveraging social media for customer engagement at http://bit.ly/JayEhret

Really Cool Statistics

Small business owners use social media to attract new customers:

  • 75% surveyed have a company page on a social networking site
  • 61% use social media for identifying and attracting new customers
  • 57% have built a network through a site like LinkedIn
  • 45% expect social media to be profitable in the next twelve months

Small business owners still have concerns with social media:

  • 50% of small business social media users say it takes more time than expected
  • 17% express that social media gives people a chance to criticize their business on the Internet
  • Only 6% feel that social media use has hurt the image of the business more than helped it

“Social media levels the playing field for small businesses by helping them deliver customer service,” says Janet Wagner, director of the Center for Excellence in Service at the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business. “Time spent on Twitter®, Facebook® and blogs is an investment in making it easier for small businesses to compete.”

People Are Getting More Creative

The main theme of this edition of the report is “Creativity as a strategy for success”. From the report, the executive summary mentions how “Small businesses are highly successful in getting referrals from existing customers, but struggle to be creative and differentiate themselves.” The major ways that small businesses differentiate themselves from competitors are:

  • Superior customer service (78 percent)
  • Higher quality products and services (76 percent)
  • Creative ideas to address customers’ needs (65 percent)
  • Lower prices (44 percent)

Among these four areas of differentiation, superior service and creativity are correlated with competitive success, while quality and low prices make little difference to small business success.   Perhaps everyone claims to have high quality, making it a marginal strategy for differentiation, while cutting prices is not sustainable for small enterprises that lack the economies of scale to keep costs low.

About the SBSI Report and Other Key Findings

In addition to tracking how small business owners use technology, the SBSI Index measures how they are doing in six key areas of business: capital access, marketing and innovation, workforce, customer service, computer technology and compliance.

Other key findings from the December 2009 Small Business Success Index include:

Small businesses experience positive effects from the economic downturn:

  • 72%  have found ways to operate more efficiently (up significantly from 66% in June)
  • 47% have been led to find new products and services that benefit customers
  • 43% have become better teams as hard times force people to work together

Building online presence continues to be key focus for small businesses:

  • Company Web sites are a top technology investment in the next two years, with small businesses either adding new features/functionality to their existing Web sites or building one from scratch.
  • The ability to showcase their products and services online to attract new customers is second in the hierarchy of technology investments small business owners plan to make in the next two years.
  • Social media investments rank third in small business investments to be made in the next two years.

Come On You Know You Are Dying to Read the Rest of It

To download a copy of the Small Business Success Index and also find out how your business scores on the six key dimensions of small business success, visit www.growsmartbusiness.com.

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Why Every Small Business Needs an HR Program, Not an HR Department – An Interview with Jack Hayhow

May 5th, 2010 ::

I met Jack Hayhow from Opus Communications at SOBCon in Chicago last year. Opus creates custom online training with large corporations for whatever issue they might have (business processes, risk management, human resources). Jack is also a long time Network Solutions customer. He is a gregarious and knowledgeable guy who after spending 10 minutes talking with him realized we had much in common. He had just put out this book called “Wisdom of the Flying Pig”. It is a great title and wanted to read it but he didn’t have any copies so he asked for my card and promised to send a copy. As most conferences go, you hope to stay in touch with usually you never talk to them again. Low and behold about a month later I received this package and in it was a copy of the book and a box with a battery operated, you guessed it, a flying pig. This became quite the popular toy in my office and left an indelible impression so I would never forget Jack. So a year goes by and he emails me about a new business that he has spun out from Opus called ReallyEasyHR. Of course, I wanted to know more. Recently I was able to sit down with him, catch up on things and talk about this new business, ReallyEasyHR. This is a transcript of the interview:

Steve: Jack, you mentioned that the motivation to build this started about 5 years ago based on the need to do HR compliance for your own small business. You decided to build your own so, why were other solutions not a fit?

Jack: To answer that, I need to give you a little background.  Our business had grown quickly from three to nine employees.  I suspected there were some HR issues I needed to tend to, but I had no idea exactly what they were.  I looked, but I could find nothing that told me in definitive terms what I needed to do to keep myself out of trouble.

So I hired an HR consultant and worked with our lawyers and we put together a very good program – but it cost close to $10,000.  When I saw what I got for that $10,000, I thought  -  “there HAS to be a better way”.

Lawyers are good for dealing with problems but they cost a lot.  HR consultants want to make a huge deal out of HR stuff.  Small business owners like me want to comply with the law in quickest, easiest, cheapest way possible.  We’re not interested in becoming HR professionals – we’ve got businesses to run.

So we developed ReallyEasyHR.  ReallyEasyHR provides a complete small company HR program for just $30 per month.  It gives small business owners a way to deal effectively with HR compliance and get back to their business.  We built it because we couldn’t find an existing option that was anywhere near cost effective.

Steve: From your experiences you first wrote HR Basics to help other small business avoid the landmines you experienced. What is the core of this white paper?

Jack: HR Basics tells small business owners what they need to do right now, what can wait until later and what they can forget about completely.  If I would have had this information a few years ago, I would have saved myself a bunch of money.

Fundamentally, HR Basics details the three things a small business needs to do to comply with HR laws and regulations.  If a small business does these three things, it’s tough to get in too much trouble.

Steve: After living with this application and evolving it to a mature solution that others could use, you decided to open ReallyEasyHR into the wild. What was the catalyst to spin this off from Opus and start and entirely new business?

Jack: The business model for ReallyEasyHR is substantially different from Opus.  It just seemed to make more sense to operate it as a separate entity.

Steve: ReallyEasyHR is sold as software as a service (SaaS) and includes many things around compliance and HR management. What are its core functions and more importantly, what does it not do? What are the real differentiators in this solution that small business should note?

Jack: That’s a great question.  The core of any effective HR program is the employee handbook.  ReallyEasyHR provides an Instant Online Handbook.  The business owner answers 12 questions and ReallyEasyHR generates a customized online employee handbook with the policies most small businesses need.  It takes less than five minutes.

Most importantly, after an employee reads the handbook, the employee acknowledges receipt and acceptance of everything in the handbook by digitally signing.  A record of that acceptance is stored in the system.

ReallyEasyHR also provides high-quality, video based training on a variety of essential topics.  Sexual Harassment Prevention, Time Management and Management Skills to name a few.  Every course has a test and test records are stored in the system for reporting purposes.

Finally, ReallyEasyHR also accommodates any proprietary documents, notifications or training a business might have – all of it goes right into ReallyEasyHR making it really easy to administer.

I guess the other differentiator is the price.  For $30 per month it’s almost impossible to go wrong.

Steve: Many small businesses get pitched with all types and sizes of products these days, what have you learned from marketing and selling a product (ReallyEasyHR) to marketing and selling a service (Opus)?

Jack: I wish I had a magic bullet or a secret sauce but I don’t.  I think it always comes down to understanding what the target audience needs and addressing that need in a far superior manner.  HR is a distraction and a pain in the butt for most small business owners.  We alleviate that pain quickly and cheaply.

Steve: I usually close my interviews with a “five things” question. In this case I would like to have you talk about five HR mistakes that could kill a small business.

Jack: HR is about two things:  Compliance and performance.

Let’s start with compliance.  Every business needs an employee handbook that lays out the rules and regulations.  If you don’t have that, you run the risk of having all kinds of problems.  So if you don’t do anything else, put together an employee handbook.  Take a look at our HR Basics document to get a sense of the policies you need.

Every company needs to maintain certain employee files.  Again, refer to our HR Basics for details.  But make absolutely certain your I-9 file is in proper order.

And every company is required to post certain state and federal information.  I don’t mean to sound like a broken record, but it’s all covered in HR Basics.

Now, to performance.  I think the short version is performance is about selecting the right people and providing what they need to excel.

I believe you can’t stack enough good people up to make a great one, so selection is critical.  And finally, great people need great managers.  In my opinion, companies languish or fail far too often because they lack great managers.

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Do You Have the Entrepreneurial Mindset?

May 3rd, 2010 ::

My people want to become entrepreneurs and some even feel that they are hard wired for it. In a recent post on the blog “What’s Next Gen Y”, Carol Roth wrote a post on the entrepreneurial mindset. She poses some interesting questions and makes you ask yourself why do you want to start in the first place?

Many will say “to make more money” or “to have more freedom” but in the end it is about seeing a customer need, wanting to fill it and believing that you are the person to fill that need and build a company to serve that need.

Here is a excerpt:

“Unfortunately, most of the reasons that people start businesses are myths based on a gross misunderstanding of what it means or what it takes to be an entrepreneur.

So, what are some good reasons to start your own business?

There’s a customer need! We have more products and services available to us than we would ever want or need, which makes today’s entrepreneurial landscape very different than it was just 50 years ago. If there is a gap in the market that customers are desperate for a solution to and willing to pay for, that’s a darn good reason to start a business. Remember, Ray Kroc didn’t start McDonald’s because he was bored or unfulfilled; he did so to meet a customer need!”

You can find the rest of the post at http://www.whatsnextgeny.com/good-and-bad-reasons-to-start-a-business/

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Ever Wanted to Go to a Tech Conference in Hawaii? The Search and Social Media Woot! Conference

April 30th, 2010 ::

The following is a guest post by Jenn Mathews – Managing Partner, Wappow!

I’m excited to share with you our big plans for the Search and Social Media Woot!—an event like no other. The Search and Social Woot! is open to anyone interested in joining in on the fast-moving, ever-changing discussion about natural search (SEO), paid search (SEM), and social media marketing. Thanks so much, Shashi Bellamkonda, for giving me this opportunity to share news about this all-together different kind of event experience with your clients and readers. To express our gratitude we would like to offer Network Solutions customers and readers a special 20% off registration.  Just use “netsol20” when registering before September 26, 2010.

The Woot! Difference

At Woot!, we listen to our attendees. Based on feedback from other conferences and our own personal experiences we don’t just present slides or talk at the audience. Woot! panel discussions are interactive with a heavy focus on back-and-forth idea exchange and lively debate with longer Q&A sessions. We tackle the real issues and how they’re affecting businesses today—things like understanding your demographic and how to target them, effective linking strategy for SEO through social networking sites, analyzing results and optimizing your ads for better performance, real-world social media techniques, and more.

Beginners will walk away with expert knowledge. And advanced users will return home with an even greater wealth of information about how to tackle today’s challenges—and prepare for tomorrow’s.

The When, Who, and What of Woot!

Our next Woot! is happening this coming September 27th-30th, 2010 at the Kaua’I Marriott Resort in Hawaii. We’ve already got some big names and leading industry experts lined up (with speakers from companies like Yahoo!, Microsoft/Bing advertising, MySpace, Real Networks, Logitech, and more), who are ready to share and speak with you about what you’re doing (or could be doing) with your search marketing and social media campaigns.

Woot! Connecting and Networking

At Woot!, we work hard… and we play hard. So when that closing bell sounds at the end of the Woot! day, be ready to get down, relax, have fun, and continue the conversation at networking events and out-of-the-ordinary activities designed to build relationships and strong connections. There’ll be fun ice-breakers that open the door for effective networking with fellow marketers, industry experts, and the speakers themselves.

Fun and Games with Woot!

Got a good golf game? Challenge Woot! speakers and fellow attendees at our official Woot! golf tournament. Like a good luau, dinner, or cocktail hour? Join us each night for a relaxing cocktails and appetizers followed by a friendly dining experience. Dig the beach-side action like volleyball, paddle boarding, kayaking, and more? Well, get on board!

Because at Woot!, there’s never a dull moment. Come with questions and a thirst for knowledge in search marketing and social media—and return home with big ideas as well as the power of new connections and friends.

Register for Woot! Today

Pre-registration is open now! Sign up before July 11, 2010 and get a full-access conference pass for just $1,879—that gets you access to all things Woot!  including presentations, panels, dining, networking activities, and more. Want to bring a friend? Add on a companion pass and that special someone can enjoy inner tubing, kayaking, the luau, cocktails, and more—right by your side. (Pssst. We’ve also got networking passes that allow you to bring along officemates and colleagues—so they can join the conversation and connect with industry experts, attendees, and speakers too.)

Check out the full details about registration now at wappow.com/Register

Learn more about Search and Social Woot! including agenda, activities, speakers, sponsors and more at wappow.com/searchandsocial

About our Guest Post Author:

Jenn Mathews (SEOGoddess) while most known for her work in Search Engine Optimization is the managing partner of Wappow! a company focused on staying ahead of cutting edge technologies and the digital world we live in. Jenn has previously worked for companies such as Classmates.com and Concur Technologies managing SEO as well as all of the online marketing both in director level and VP level positions.

After speaking at several conferences and other search marketing related events Jenn found a passion for the Search Insider Summit in 2007 and is now putting together the Search and Social Woot! and Emerging Media Woot! both in Hawaii this Fall 2010.
Jenn Mathews (SEOGoddess) while most known for her work in Search Engine Optimization is the managing partner of Wappow! a company focused on staying ahead of cutting edge technologies and the digital world we live in. Jenn has previously worked for companies such as Classmates.com and Concur Technologies managing SEO as well as all of the online marketing both in director level and VP level positions.
After speaking at several conferences and other search marketing related events Jenn found a passion for the Search Insider Summit in 2007 and is now putting together the Search and Social Woot! and Emerging Media Woot! both in Hawaii this Fall 2010.