Hello and thanks for visiting. This is the former blog of David Meerman Scott’s Social Media Master Class. To view the new and improved blog, please go here. Thanks so much.
Archive for 2009
5 sleeps to go!! Before Freakin Early Bird expires.
In Uncategorized on June 24, 2009 at 12:16 pmYep. 5 Sleeps. Count them. And then the Freakin Early Bird (FIB) offer expires. True. It’s hardwired into the system, cannot over-ride.
$675 + GST for a full day masterclass with David Meerman Scott + interactive panel + copy of World Wide Rave + cocktail party + snuggie. Ok. That was too much.
At any rate, awesome value as it goes up to $745 + GST until July 31, $815 + GST for any tickets left in August.
Book Sydney here – Sep 2
Book Melbourne here – Sep 4
And big thanks to Trevor Young of PR Warrior for his review of WWR…for more details have a look.
Attending Tweetupmellers?
In Uncategorized on June 14, 2009 at 7:38 pmAttending Tweetupmellers? You’re in the running for a set of David Meerman Scott’s best selling book The Rules of Marketing and PR, and his latest book World Wide Rave! I think I hear the distant cries of “Woop Woop”" ? !

What’s Tweetupmellers?
When people on Twitter meet in real life, it’s often called a “Tweetup”. There’s a whole stack of them occurring all over the country. Tweetupmellers is the real time, face-to-face networking baby of Sam Mutimer or Sam 2.0 as she is better known. This Thursday’s event (The Social in Windsor) is turning into a cracker! 51 currently attending and the numbers are expected to rise! Follow them: @tweetupmellers or have alook at the Facebook fanpage for more details
Twitter Round Up
While we’re on the topic (and do be assured that Social Media and Online Marketing is not just about Twitter), for many people, Twitter has replaced a RSS feed. Here’s a list of the posts we liked this week found on Twitter.
Is Social Media the New Punk Rock – Gerry McCusker’s Punk Rock / Social Media youtube clip via @themediapod
[25/6/09 UPDATE - Goodness! Check out the debate on Mumbrella about this clip! Awesome work Gerry!!]
How will you be judged? A cautionary tale on how your online persona is viewed by @anotheradwanker
Latest list of top Australian marketing blogs via @bandt
An interesting discussion on the lack of marketers in the top marketing blogs via @katekendall
Is Social Media killing PR ? A provocative look at “Marauding Bloggers”…by @trevoryoung
If you had a favourite, you think should be on the list, let us know! Later in the week we’ll introduce you to the “First Rule of the Rave” (cue fanfare!)
Everybody is wrong!
In Uncategorized on June 13, 2009 at 2:03 amA popular post by David earlier this week (http://www.webinknow.com/2009/06/everybody-is-wrong.html) repeated here with permission. It begs the question:
What conventional wisdom that “everybody knows” can you challenge?
I’ve gotten tremendous pushback from thousands of people over the past decade on these ideas. But I’ve also had thousands of people reach out to me to say that these ideas have been incredibly helpful to them.
Some of the best ideas come from contrarians.
Here are some things I’ve challenged in the past ten years.
“Everybody knows that marketing is about promoting your product.”
Everybody is wrong. When you adhere to the famous “four Ps of marketing” and talk up your product (the first P) you end up with egotistical nonsense. Nobody cares about your products. They care about themselves and solving their problems. Marketing is about understanding your buyer personas and creating information that they want to consume.
“Everybody knows that PR is about pitching the media.”
Everybody is wrong. These days, journalists don’t passively wait to see what brilliant PR pitches are sitting in their email in-box. In fact, they increasingly see email pitches as spam. However journalists are looking for story ideas all the time by searching Google, reading blogs, and following Twitter. Are they finding you?
“Everybody knows that the press release is dead.”
Everybody is wrong. The press release is an effective media to reach buyers directly. When you craft a release from your buyers’ perspective and send it through one of the press release distribution services, your news hits people’s Google Alerts, is indexed by the news search engines, and is syndicated to hundreds of news portals, vertical market sites, and via RSS feeds.
“Everybody knows that newspapers are dying.”
Everybody is wrong. When television came around, people predicted the death of radio. Radio didn’t go away, but the ways people consumed radio content changed because people didn’t sit around watching the radio in their living rooms anymore. The Web will not kill newspapers. But individual newspapers like my hometown paper The Boston Globe have to change and adapt to survive.
“Everybody knows that working for a big company means you have job security.”
Everybody is wrong. Just ask people who worked for Bear Stearns or Enron or Worldcom or Lehman Brothers about job security. You make your own security by being excellent at what you do. I was fired three times. Now, by working for themselves, millions of people have the greatest job security there is.
Here’s a new one I am hearing more and more.
“Everybody knows that social media changes everything.”
Everybody is wrong. Yes, social media is changing the ways that companies are communicating on the web. But that doesn’t mean that offline marketing and communications is changing. You still need to meet with customers. Sometimes attending or exhibiting at a trade show is a good idea. TV and magazine advertising can still be effective. And getting your company into the Wall Street Journal or seen on Oprah (or your trade publication) has tremendous value.
What conventional wisdom that “everybody knows” can you challenge?
From Tweet to Today
In Uncategorized on June 8, 2009 at 10:23 am
Hi, I’m Jennifer Frahm (@jenfrahm on Twitter). Welcome to the supporting blog of David Meerman Scott’s Australian Masterclass series in Sydney and Melbourne, we’re going to be posting updates, case studies, thoughts on the upcoming events with David here. Some of you may be wondering: How did this happen? It’s kind of an interesting story, almost a post script of my earlier post on my other blog of my first 100 days of Twitter.
So Easter Saturday, I saw David tweet he was heading over to Wellington for a 2 day seminar the following week. There’s not much hierachy in Twitterland, and while there are some Twitter-celebs who don’t engage with the newbies, I had a hunch David might be different. I sent him a tweet asking if he had plans to come to Australia (well c’mon, you fly all that way to NZ and don’t come here?). He didn’t have time, but indicated his interest in coming later. So a week later I sent David a proposal to consider. A bit of to-ing and fro-ing, conversations, and a skype or two later, and voila: A Social Media and Online Marketing Masterclass is born!
You see, I run events for IABC Victoria, work in communications consulting, have worked in marketing, and hang out with marketing managers and PR folk, socially and for business. I knew that a number of them were struggling professionally with what to do about Social Media. It was even more stressful for them as their GMs and CEOs and clients were expecting them to be able to advise them on what their organisations should be doing! I figured the time was right for a high level Masterclass pitched at Executives.

David is the best selling author of the The New Rules of Marketing and PR (a bit of a bible really) and most recently World Wide Rave. Another colleague Mark Parker (@smartselling) saw him present last year and was blown away - he said,
I had the opportunity to hear David speak at the New Marketing Summit in Boston in October last year. David delivered the key note speech at the event and chaired a number of panel sessions. Of the many great speakers at the event, David stood out for me because he clearly knows what he is talking about and has an almost Australian sense of self-deprecating humour.
David Meerman Scott coming down under to talk social media and online marketing is great news for those of us involved in this space.
I would encourage anyone involved in marketing, sales, or PR to attend the events in Melbourne or Sydney – you won’t regret it.
But the Twittering didn’t stop there! I knew I wanted a Digital Agency and a PR Agency to partner with. The great thing about Twitter is you get to see people in a fairly unedited fashion (what they read, how they interact, how much thought leadership they offer). I knew who I really wanted to work with. So I reached out to one of my followers @nextbrett from Next Digital and got some contacts, and then to @trevoryoung of ParkYoung, and now I am thrilled to say I couldn’t have better partners on a very exciting project!
Sounds like Twitter may have a little more to offer than just answering “what are you doing now” ?
Follow us at @SocialMediaMC for more updates…


