I’m proud to say I’ve just wrapped up a project together with Emergency Physicians International to get a new web site together for them. I’m really happy with the way it came out, and they are too!
Hello! My name is Jim Hodgson, and this is my new media marketing company based in Atlanta, Georgia.
I hope you're thinking of how we can work together!
We help people in any market make better, more lasting connections with their clients and friends. Here's how:
- Speaking in public about New Media
- Creating new media marketing plans
- Designing and writing email newsletters
- Making viral videos
- Designing and implementing web sites
- Converting existing sites to Wordpress
Check me out at NAMM on June 19th, and the Business of Wordpress conference, June 22 and 23 in Atlanta, GA!
RECENT PROJECTS
Emergency Physicians International
Jen Lowe gets a new site
Perennial friend and all-around awesome person Jen Lowe has a brand new web site look. She wanted to incorporate the cool artwork from her CD into a wordpress-enabled site, and I was glad to make it happen. Check out her site and her songs!
Tradewinds Financial
My friend Ward Binns over at Airtight Design referred me to Tradewind Financial, who needed a little love on their website. It went great, and I’m glad to have been involved. Check them out!
East Atlanta Kids Club
The site for East Atlanta Kids Club is live at last! We’ve been working on getting this one fine tuned, and I’m happy to say that it came out great. This is a pro bono project I took on in conjunction with C-Level Mangement. As an Atlanta resident, I’m glad to help out local kids any time I can. Thanks to Jeff Scott, Sean Burns, Jill Sieder and everyone else for working with me! It came out great!
Gene Randall
Wow, I’m proud to say that I had the honor of working with Gene Randall. If you’ve turned on your TV during any major historical news story over the last twenty years or so, his face will be easily recognizable to you. He’s worked at CNN and NBC, interviewed presidents and world leaders, and is now on the WordPress wagon thanks to us! How awesome is that?
Thanks for thinking of us, Gene!
"Caps and Corks previous website was not connecting with my customers. Jim Hodgson was able to offer great advice to help fix that. He did a complete redesign of the site, stayed within my budget and delivered it quickly. I will continue to use his services to further develop my business." -- Stuart Byrne, Caps and Corks
"Jim Hodgson is the only person I would consider calling to encode a web site, build a content management platform, or simply just to giggle. He is that good. He is that funny." -- Jen Lowe, Friedman Kannenberg
"Hodgson's collaboration with us on our recent Scott Weiland promotion provided us with a customized turn-key solution to our web development needs and in record time." -- Melanie Higgins, Mighty Loud Entertainment
The Four Deadly New Media Marketing Sins
There are really only a few sins in new media marketing. For the most part, it’s the wild west out here, which is good. It means that a lot of interesting stuff can and does happen. However, there are four deadly sins that can really wreck your efforts.
As hard as it may be to believe, this Internet thing is new to a lot of us still. Many businesses are still trying to get their heads around it, and thank God for it because it means I have a lot of work to do!
Here’s the most basic change between old media marketing and new media marketing. It’s so important, I’m going to bold it. Let’s be bold!
Old Media marketing is geared toward helping the seller, and New Media marketing is geared toward helping the buyer.
This is is the kernel of the big change between then and now. You’ll notice that a lot of big companies are struggling with their image and customer trust. This is because one tiny little customer with a bad experience has a global voice. This is a big topic unto itself, though, so let’s stay focused.
Here is my list of four deadly new media marketing sins. If you can think of more, please contact me (jim@hodgsonco.com) and tell me about it!
- Overplugging
- Content encrustation
- Sneakyness
- Abusing Permission
All righty, let’s get cracking!
1. Overplugging
We start with the least severe of new media marketing sins, Overplugging.
Overplugging – Only using new media tools to plug your business, or talk about boring stuff. Failing to include the human element.
This is something that people who are new to Twitter, as an example, often do. Let’s say a party promoter attends a workshop on social media. She watches that video that all social media people show with the numbers talking about how awesome it is (this one), and she’s totally jazzed. She signs herself up a twitter account and starts gathering followers.
She posts whenever there is a party, or a special event. She gets a hundred followers… which is great! But it doesn’t go anywhere from there.
After a year of the same hundred followers, she might be less jazzed about social media. She might start thinking that the workshop was a waste, and that she’s wasting her time on twitter. Oh no!
In this case, Twitter is not the problem. She’s just overplugging! The great thing about new media marketing is that not only are you allowed to talk about stuff other than business, you absolutely should! I know a party planner has a million funny or endearing stories from wedding rehearsal dinners or New year’s Eve parties, or whatever. Those stories should be on Twitter!
Why? Because the point is not just to advertise. It’s to draw people into your story. Every business in the world has hilarious clients, silly stories, legends and folklore. Why not share that stuff with your customer base? Why not talk about your clients or customers? Throw them a shout out and they will return the favor!
Clients from small business ask me all the time “Does Twitter really work?” and I find it a hard question to answer. It’s like asking if books really work.
Well, yeah! The good ones sure do!
2. Content Encrustation
This is a pet peeve of mine, and has been for a long time. Network TV is so guilty of this it hurts, but they got away with it for a long time because they had a near-monopoly on visual media.
Unfortunately this has trained people that content encrustation is okay, but it’s not!
Content Encrustation – The practice of weighing down perfectly good content with so many ads that potential customers question their decision to view the content in the first place.
One of the chief examples of content encrustation that makes me seethe is web pages that have an intro. When I was teaching design students about web design, I forbade intro pages of any kind. Here’s my thinking:
Why would you ever want to put an extra step between what you have to offer and your consumer?
If you had a brick-and-mortar store, would you hire a dancer to leap out at people walking into your store, dancing and singing about how great your store is, or trying to “set the mood” before they walked in? I hope not!
Here’s another great example of content encrustation. Yesterday I was on the Bicycling.com web site. I noticed a video embedded on the right side of the page, appearing to show me a preview of the Gary Fisher Cronus bicycle. If you’re like me and you have a serious addiction to purchasing bicycles, then you will watch pretty much any video about them. This one is especially interesting to me because Gary Fisher is historically a mountain bike pioneer and this video is about a road bike.
So, I was interested, and I clicked play. That’s when I got hit with the content encrustation.
I had to sit through a 15 second advertisement for an SUV! Shame, Bicycling!
Their site is already fairly encrusted with blinking/shifting ads, but those do not annoy me too much because I have a Firefox plugin called AdblockPro that hides most of them. What annoys me is I am giving Bicycling a chance to wow me with their content (which is in itself an ad for Gary Fisher bikes) and they’re making me sit through an ad that I didn’t know I was going to have to sit through for something I don’t want at all.
This presents a problem for magazines like Bicycling, because they used to be the only source for first looks at new gear. You’d have to endure the content encrustation.
The problem comes when everyone in the world has a global voice. A quick search on YouTube returns many videos about the same bicycle with no 15 second ad. So now Bicycling has lost their chance to be a tastemaker to me on the subject of new bicycles.
Does that make sense?
Now, granted, this also presents some trouble for Bicycling in terms of monetizing a site without content encrustation, but that’s a business model issue. I don’t think that making it harder to see what they do will help. I think they should remove the encrustation entirely and use great content to boost traffic and then market their magazine to that customer base.
3. Sneakyness
It seems to me that for last year or two there has been a great push to create viral videos. Companies hired people to create them, and in many cases they hoped to appear to be amateur creations.
This is not a time to be anything but completely honest and open with your customers.
Also, it is important to realize that when you release a video on the internet, you are releasing it to a countless horde of people who have the time and interest to dissect it in every possible way. If they think they are being misled, they will stop paying attention.
So if you are considering a viral marketing campaign of some kind and it includes any attempt whatsoever to conceal the true source, in my opinion you should give it a pass. There are plenty of great ways to create interesting content about your business that people would love to watch.
For examples of great non-sneaky viral videos, check out hornsmasher.com (possibly the only web site with an intro that I’ve ever liked) and the newest Delta InFlight video.
Who ever heard of an airplane safety video being so good that everyone wanted to watch it? Or a site about musical instrument repair that is so hilarious? Amazing!
4. Abuse of Permission
Oh boy, we have finally gotten to the most terrible one of them all: Abuse of permission! This probably doesn’t need too much discussion as we all know what spam is by this point, but it bears repeating that abusing a customer’s permission is a terrible idea.
I advise against things like automatically adding them to your newsletter, and I definitely advise against texting customer mobile numbers. For some reason, local musicians think it’s okay to text everyone in their phones about upcoming shows, and it’s not. At least with most email spam I can click something to unsubscribe!
Conclusion
Above all, I get a weird sensation when I hear people talk about “driving” business. Things have changed now. We don’t do that anymore.
Now we “draw” business through the use of openness, and great content!
Once you try it, you’re gonna like it!




Here's a sweet guitar review on behalf of our friends at 