Ads 468x60px

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills

Link to ShoeMoney

How #ID2013 managed to piss off all their industry speakers

Posted: 15 Oct 2013 07:07 AM PDT

Post image for How #ID2013 managed to piss off all their industry speakers

So you put on a conference, and manage to land a great number of A-list speakers, albeit some were doing it as a "favor" and others wanted to be able to write off a trip to Miami, but well-known pseudo celebrity speakers in the industry.  The conference – Interactivity Digital in South Beach Miami – actually took place in May earlier this year, so it's quite a feat to manage to piss off nearly every speaker there months after the fact.  But that is precisely what Gary Henderson decided to do when Interactivity Digital created a video titled "Shit Digital Marketers Say", which took bits and pieces of presentations, COMPLETELY out of context, to make all those speakers sound like arrogant assholes.  Definitely a great way to say how much you appreciated them making your conference a success.

The subtitle was just as horrible – "The Men of South Beach #ID2013", which raises the question of what the hell did he have planned for the video of the women status conference? I shudder to imagine.

So what are some of the gems they decided to pull out to make these speakers look like complete egotistical douches?  Here is a sampling. angry_300x2252

Rand Fishkin: "I visit Silicon Valley quite a bit"

Marty Weintraub: "We're hiring, Duluth is amazing"

Simon Heseltine: "I teach at Georgetown University"

Bill Hunt: "Do we suck less or do we suck more than our competitors?"

Peter Shankman "How many of you have ever been in a relationship.  Like offline, like an actual physical relationship with a person?"

I could go on, but you can watch it in all its cringeworthy goodness here.

Now, at the time of the event, and they did a blog post with 25 different tips from all the same speakers that they are now making look ridiculous. So definitely wasn't like they didn't have some great content to pick and choose from, these speakers had some kick ass quotes, but they decide to put out things that make them look like assholes?  Smart move.   If he actually did the video with these kickass quotes, he would have gotten a ton of views and a ton of shares, but no, he went for pissing off (and on) the speakers instead.

Simon Heseltine was the first person to point out the video (you must be friends with Simon to view it unfortunately and at 125 comments and counting, it was too long to post multiple screen shots here) and the horrible impression it gave when he said “So you manage to get a bunch of good industry speakers to your first show. You did a good job, we did a good job. Now you trash us with a disrespectful, taken out of context video and article. It’s a good job you’ve cancelled your follow up show or I would have pulled out of speaking at it today.”  And it didn’t take long for people to call out the conference and Gary who actually made some responses to the controversy.  You know how they say you can calm a social media storm with great comments?  Obviously his company doesn’t follow that social media practice based on his responses.

So after Gary Henderson ruffled all those feathers, did he grovel and apologize to those speakers he pissed off?  Pffft, of course not.  He bitched about the people complaining instead.

Gary Henderson decided to send a private message to at least one of those complainers, Miranda Miller, and told her "Stop being a drama queen and find something worthwhile to do."  Sorry Gary, the drama queen certainly isn’t the person standing up for what’s right, its the person who insists nothing was wrong.

Yep, definitely the way to smooth those ruffled feathers, when she was simply standing up for what she saw was the total mistreatment of her friends by this guy who deemed her a drama queen.   He also chided her – in a public thread about the video – "You don't talk bad about people you don't know in public.  People make mistakes, apologize to the person they upset and delete the post.  Let it be."  My bad, wasn't that essentially what he was doing in his video, making all those speakers look like douches?

Good thing he cancelled his big party at Pubcon.  He cancelled his next conference that was set for December (not surprisingly, he stated he only sold 6 tickets) and then cancelled the Pubcon party.  Although I know that if the party was still going on, everyone who matters would rather pay for drinks in the bar than the open bar promised at their party.

A public apology for the wrong impression the video gave, and groveling to those offended would have gone a long way to repairing relationships and smoothing out those feathers.  But instead he decided to berate those who had an issue with it when a heartfelt “my bad, we screwed up” would have worked wonders and we all would move on to the next SEO scandal and I wouldn’t have bothered writing about it.  And enough industry professionals who were in the original video would have held it up as “sometimes we get bad ideas, here is what one company did and how they made it right”, instead of us talking about how he made it worse.

Looking for an SEO service that won’t get you banned?

How Not to Pitch a Guest Post: Four Mistakes and Five Things to Get Right - DailyBlogTips

How Not to Pitch a Guest Post: Four Mistakes and Five Things to Get Right - DailyBlogTips


How Not to Pitch a Guest Post: Four Mistakes and Five Things to Get Right

Posted: 15 Oct 2013 03:37 AM PDT

Quick reminder: we're currently running a survey to help us decide on post topics and on how best to put together our upcoming ecourse. Click here to take the survey and make your opinion count!

If you've been around the blogosphere for more than a few weeks, you've probably come across the idea of guest posts.

A guest post is a piece of content that you write for someone else's blog. You'll normally get to have a short "bio" at the start or end of the post, which introduces you briefly and links back to your blog (or Twitter account, Facebook page or whatever you want).

Guest posts are a great way to:

  • Get your ideas in front of a bigger audience.
  • Bring new readers back to your blog.
  • Get high-quality links to your blog or website.
  • Build relationships with big-name bloggers.

You might be hesitant to guest post, especially if you're still quite a new blogger. In fact, you're almost certainly more ready than you think.

The first step to landing a guest posting opportunity is normally to write a pitch. Want the good news? Most guest post pitches are so poorly done that yours has a great chance of standing out.

Here's a guest post pitch I received a few days ago, for my blog Aliventures (which is about writing). It's typical of ones that come into my inbox. The sections in square brackets are where I’ve removed identifying details:

Heya!

Hope you are having an awesome day!

I would like to express my interest to submit a compelling  guest post.

All our articles are visually appealing & written with care and love and detailed research.

To get a feel for how I write, see the below posts I did for some quite authoritative sites:

  • [link to a post about iPhone models]
  • [link to a post about Facebook traffic]
  • [link to a post about URL shorteners]

Here are the articles I have available as of now.

[link to a spreadsheet of articles on Google docs]

This sheet is updated daily at 8am so you can check back anytime and request more articles ANYTIME.

Which one would you be most interested in?

Regards,

[John Smith]

 

There's sadly a lot wrong with this pitch.

#1: "John" doesn't use my name, he just writes "Heya!"

This is an instant clue that he's sending out the same email to masses of bloggers. (Another clue – and one I've seen a few times – is being addressed not as "Ali" but by another name… be careful with copy-and-paste.)

#2: The writing isn’t as good as I’d like.

To be fair here, John's email is pretty good. But the line "I would like to express my interest to submit a compelling guest post" is awkward: "express my interest to" isn't grammatical. (It should be "express my interest in guest posting" or similar.) John also switches between the first person singular (“I”) and plural (“we” – or in this case “us”).

#3: The articles listed have nothing to do with my blog Aliventures.

Although all the topics could just about be made relevant to writers (e.g. best iPhone model for writesrs), they're tangentially linked at best. I'd much prefer to see posts about aspects of writing, blogging or publishing.

#4: The GoogleDocs list covers a huge range of topics.

Would you rather have a guest post from an expert on your subject, or from someone who will write anything on any topic? I'm pretty sure you'd rather go for the expert – and so would I. Also, I'd prefer a guest post created just for my site, not a pre-written one.

 

So what can you learn from this?

  1. Don't email loads of bloggers at once. Choose a small number of target blogs and create personal pitches for each blogger.
  2. Focus your attention on blogs in your niche, so you can link to relevant posts you've written. Don't write for just anywhere that takes guest posts.
  3. Take real care over your pitch. It's the first example of your writing that your intended host blogger will see – and it needs to be as good as possible.
  4. Don't offer pre-written articles. Many bloggers will want to go back and forth with you on a pitch until they're happy with the topic and outline.
  5. Make an actual pitch. John doesn't even suggest a post idea for my site. While that's not necessarily a deal-breaker, it makes sense to offer a clear idea and outline up front. Don't waste a busy blogger's time.

 

Of course, writing a great pitch is just one step! Is there anything you'd like to ask about guest posting? Leave your question in the comments below, and I'll answer it in a future post.

 

Wanna learn how to make more money with your website? Check the Online Profits training program!