Firecat Studio

Online Strategies for Business

News and Events

Feb. 3 - Facebook Pages for Business

It's simple to create a Facebook page for your business or organization, but then what? On Friday, Feb. 3, social media pro Jennifer Navarrete will lead a Brain Jam for branding your Facebook page, monitoring and curating activity, and building a following.


Creating, Promoting and Maintaining a Facebook Page

You already know how to use Facebook. Everybody's on Facebook. And creating a Facebook page for business is easy too. Here's what's not so easy:

  • Branding the page beyond the logo
  • Deciding what content to offer
  • Building a fan base

Friday, February 3, 2012
Coworking (open house, just hang out and work) 10:30 am - 3:30 pm
Lunch discussion Noon - 1:30 pm

Where?

Firecat Studio 918 Nolan #104, San Antonio, TX 78202

You're welcome to come get some work done anytime between 10:30 am and 3:30 pm, just like working from a coffee shop but with cooler people and free coffee. Yes, you are welcome to invite others, but there's limited space, so make sure your friends register!


Coworking in March

On Friday, March 2, we're going Local! We'll discuss tactics for getting a local business or branch better online visibility with Google Places, Yelp, Foursquare and more. Save the date!

As always, please feel free to suggest upcoming brown bag topics. Thanks!

 
Worldwide Jelly Week Celebration Friday, 1/20

Firecat is hosting an all-day Jelly coworking session on Friday, January 20 as part of Worldwide Jelly Week. Bring your laptop, cell phone, or pen and paper and get some work done with some fresh faces and ideas around you.

What Is Jelly?

Jelly is a worldwide coworking movement, and it's how Firecat Studio was introduced to the coworking concept in 2006. Knowledge workers and creatives can pretty much work where ever they like, as long as they have an Internet connection. The next logical step is - where do you want to work from? For a lot of us, that's often home. But home can be isolating; you can miss the water cooler chats with coworkers and the face time with other human beings. Coworking, and Jelly, have sprung up as an alternative place to work.

To quote from the Jelly website:

Jelly started in NYC in February of 2006 when roommates Amit and Luke realized that they loved working from home, but they missed the creative brainstorming, sharing, and camaraderie of a traditional office. (Office politics, not so much.)

So they started inviting friends to come work from their home one day a week. They soon found that working in close proximity to new and interesting people every couple weeks resulted in new ideas and interesting conversations.

Emboldened by their early success, they made it a more regular thing. Jelly was born.

And What's Worldwide Jelly Day 2012?

It's a celebratory week of coworking happening worldwide. San Antonio's godfather of coworking, Todd O'Neill, has organized coworking sessions in San Antonio each day of the week. Here's the schedule so far:

  • Monday, January 16 - Geekdom, Weston Centre, 112 East Pecan, 11th Floor, San Antonio, TX 78205. Map
  • Tuesday, January 17 - La Taza Coffeehouse, 15060 San Pedro Ave/281, SATX 78232
  • Wednesday, January 18 - TBD 
  • Thursday, January 19 - TBD
  • Friday, January 20 - Firecat Studio, 918 Nolan #104, San Antonio, TX 78202. Free of charge, soft drinks provided. Brownbag lunch. Map


 
2012 Focus: Craft a Unique Selling Proposition (USP)

Ready for 2012? Friday, Jan. 6 Firecat's coworking & brownbag session will make sure your marketing explains your Unique Selling Proposition — specifically how what you offer is different, and better, than alternatives. Kate Hayward will lead the workshop.


Craft a Unique Selling Proposition (USP)

It's one thing to describe what you offer. It's a bit more difficult to get really specific about how buying from you is unique — different and better — than buying from your competition.

A first step in creating a modern business plan, your unique selling proposition tells prospects what you sell, how they benefit from buying it, and why you're the best provider of it than anyone else.

The USP was first described in the 1940s, popularized in the 1960s, and this key marketing idea is still vital today. From the 1961 edition of Reality in Advertising by Rosser Reeves:

  1. An advertising message must make a proposition to the consumer. Not just words, not just product puffery, not just show-window advertising. Each advertisement must say to each reader: "Buy this product or service, and you will get this specific benefit."
  2. The proposition must be one that the competition either cannot, or does not, offer. It must be unique—either a uniqueness of the brand or a claim not otherwise made in that particular field of advertising.
  3. The proposition must be so strong that it can move the mass millions, i.e., pull over new customers to your product.

Do you offer the lowest price? Highest quality? More choices? Best guarantee of results? A unique combination of skills and experience?

In this free coworking workshop, Kate Hayward will help participants draft their own USPs and review and improve them by getting feedback and ideas from one another. The eventual goal is to hear people you meet say, "I've heard of you. You're the company that _____ ..." When prospects are able to restate your USP, you know your marketing is effective. Let's get there together in 2012.

You may remember our fabulous presenter, Kate Hayward, from the Visual Thinking workshop she presented at Firecat's coworking and brownbag in September 2011. Kate is a seasoned curriculum developer with a BIG active brain, helps world-changing nonprofits developer and deliver mission-critical train-the-trainer strategies, and shares her thoughts on the Thinkubator.

Light sandwich fare and beverages will be provided. Feel free to bring your own if you prefer.

When?

Friday, January 6, 2012
Coworking (open house, just hang out and work) 10:30 am - 3:30 pm
Lunch discussion Noon - 1:30 pm

Where?

Firecat Studio 918 Nolan #104, San Antonio, TX 78202

You're welcome to come get some work done anytime between 10:30 am and 3:30 pm, just like working from a coffee shop but with cooler people and free coffee. Yes, you are welcome to invite others, but there's limited space, so make sure your friends register!


Coworking in February

On Friday, February 3, Jennifer Navarrete of MediaFuse and Susan Price of Firecat will give a free sample of our upcoming half-day full Facebook Pages for Business. Save the date!

As always, please feel free to suggest upcoming brown bag topics. Thanks!

 
LiveZilla Live Help

Our Work


get-a-free-consultation

Search

 

Considering a Redesign?

Request our free
Website Redesign Checklist

Get Updates

*
*
*
* required fields

Follow Firecat


Social Media for Business: Phase One - Discovery PDF Print E-mail

The fearless folks at Firecat are early adopters. We live and breathe LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, voice and text chat, forums and other ways of staying connected online. We help businesses, nonprofit organizations and governmental agencies navigate the relatively unknown waters of social media. Just like individuals, organizations learn social media by participating, learning, and gradually developing an online persona (or personas) that authentically represent them.

Stage 1: Discovery

If social media pundits seem to know it all and you feel like a newbie (n00b!), remember that these communication technologies are a brave new world for everyone and they're evolving very rapidly. They're here to stay, and it's not a problem that you weren't the first one to sign up. The folks who first bought ridiculously expensive, briefcase-sized cell phones earned some bragging rights, but we all got there in the end, didn't we?

Newspapers didn't replace books, radio didn't replace newspapers, and TV didn't replace radio. Social media outlets don't REPLACE any of the existing communications media, they are adding new channels, new possibilities, new options. It's all additive. That may sound like bad news to those of us who feel overwhelmed and overworked. But your customers, stakeholders, prospects, employees -- whoever you want to connect with -- are out there, right now, creating content for you to find. Internet technology makes this findable, measurable. These conversations were happening all along, anyway, you just didn't know about them. Now, thanks to the Internet, you do.

The first order of business is to understand who you want to connect with and where they congregate online. Google is your best friend for this; a few well-considered searches can reveal volumes about your customers, prospects, audience, employees, and competitors. Try your company name first. Then your service or product and location -- the city, the state, the region.

In addition to Google searches, go directly into the primary social media gathering places and do a search for your company name, competitors' names, your city and industry, and so forth. Social media points we pay particular attention to include:

  • LinkedIn. Business-flavored "seven degrees of separation" style social networking, managed introductions, and expert question-and-answer showcase.
  • Facebook. Social networking environment with emphasis on college-age and adults, so has more business flavor than the similar MySpace. Facebook applications offer commercial opportunities; Facebook groups invite all sorts of configurations to emerge.
  • Twitter. Microblogging; users answer "What are you doing?" with 140 character responses, whenever they feel like it. Some companies monitor Twitter for emerging customer service issues and even provide customer support through Twitter.
  • Flickr. Photo- and video-sharing environment that supports tagging (user-created indexing of content), discussions, commenting, voting and more.
  • MySpace. Social networking environment with emphasis on kids and teens. Supports audio, video and other applets; often used for self-expression. Think of a living, breathing high school yearbook page.
  • SecondLife. Robust virtual world that allows interaction and movement through its 3D space with avatars. Corporations such as IBM and NASA encourage their employees to collaborate here.
  • YouTube. Video-sharing environment, supports tagging, rating and commenting.
  • Yelp. User-provided reviews and ratings, searchable by location. Particularly good for local businesses.

Make notes of the most interesting discussions or interactions you find. Pay attention to volume; one nugget about your company or a key issue in a blog doesn't mean that blog will be an important part of your strategy. Make screenshots of your key finds, and be sure the URL is visible in the image so you can find the site or thread again.

Start thinking about which of these social media outlets is likely to pay off for your organization. Monitoring all of them is too big a task unless you can divide the work among several staff members.

Social Media Discovery Checklist

  1. Set up a Google News Alert with some of your keywords. Tweak the keywords if what it yields isn't helpful.
  2. Visit each of the sites above, and search for your company name or industry, or key product. Or your city.
  3. Ask the people close to you if they use the social media above, and if so, explore how and why.
  4. On each of the sites, register your simple company name if no one has registered it already.
  5. Start a list of social media gathering points for your key stakeholder groups: customers, prospects, employees, vendors, competitors.

LET US HELP

Firecat Studio is ready to help you leverage social media for your organization. We can help your staff, or manage the effort for you, with a clear plan, milestones, and measurable results. Contact us for a free consultation.