Facebook Makes the World Smaller During the Chicago Marathon

A few weeks ago I was standing on the sidelines to cheer on a couple of friends running the Chicago Marathon. They both did very well!

While I was waiting for them to pass, I snapped this photo on my iPhone 4 of a guy wearing a tutu, which just seemed comical in the context of the race.

chicago marathon tutu7 Facebook Makes the World Smaller During the Chicago Marathon

I uploaded it shortly thereafter from my iPhone to Facebook. Within minutes, a friend of mine spotted my Facebook post and commented, “I know him! That’s awesome!!!”

She tagged him in the photo, which notified him instantly. He responded, “I would have stopped to pose if you asked. What mile were you at? Thanks again for getting it. It’s fantastic.”

We had a bit of conversation and are now friends. This breaks my rule of Facebook friendship, which requires that I have spoken to you in person for at least 60 minutes, but I felt like making an exception.

I have to say as long as I’ve been on Facebook, this is one of the crazier small world moments I’ve had. With more than 45,000 people running, I took four photos and got one of someone two degrees of separation from me. And with Facebook, in a matter of hours I was connected with him.

Maybe oddballs just run in similar circles and another oddball caught my attention. icon smile Facebook Makes the World Smaller During the Chicago Marathon

As we enter an age of facial recognition technology, things like this will become more commonplace. In this case, however, I’m not sure what tech could have recognized the tutu guy.

The Working Wardrobe Fashion Blog Makes Forbes!

The Working Wardrobe, an Astek blog consulting client, just made #4 in Forbes’ list of The 20 Best Fashion Blogs for Professional Women. Hats off to Rachel Yeomans and her team for achieving such an honor in little more than a year of publication.

After working with Rachel to establish the initial strategy and infrastructure of her blog, nothing gives us more joy than seeing it soar like this. Once a publication is off and running, the majority of the hard work is in the diligence and discipline of writing and editing. In addition to that, Rachel has a natural ability to cleverly leverage social media channels to reach the people for whom she and her team write.

The Working Wardrobe is a publication geared towards the working individual–be it on finding a job, maintaining that job, interviewing for that job, or changing jobs–all the while knowing what to wear for that specific occasion. Please join us in congratulating The Working Wardrobe for their ongoing success!

Silhouettes Transparent2 The Working Wardrobe Fashion Blog Makes Forbes!

Get the Most Leads from Your Website

This month we’re discussing Web analytics and how they can help you construct your website in the manner that will best enable you to reach your goal, whether it’s to generate leads, sell products, express thought leadership, or anything else. There are numerous design and strategic decisions involved in each of these. To help you get started, I’ve provided a simple outline of things to consider.

1. Establish your goals. You must know what you want to get from your website before you talk about how to design or build it.

2. Have a clear call to action. If you want people to buy something, don’t be afraid to make the “Buy Now” button prominent. If you want people to contact you for more information, put your phone number on the top of every page.

3. Study your analytics to figure out what kind of people are visiting your site. You’ll know from where they came, for what they searched to find you, and all kinds of other goodies.

4. Start with a wireframe storyboard to establish the strategy and hierarchy of your site before getting into the design and graphics of it. Using your goals established above, create a rough sketch of the most important elements on the page starting at the top. People still read left to right, top to bottom, so they will see everything “above the fold” before clicking or scrolling. And if they don’t see what they are looking for, they might not look any farther.

5. Design to build trust. Use trust icons such as affiliations, awards, memberships, ratings, partners, and certifications to create immediate recognition of brand value for the visitor.

6. Focus on benefits not features. Every successful company does many things well, and we often focus on listing our features. However, focusing on the actual benefits or value you bring to the table creates a much more compelling point of differentiation. (Thanks, Mr. Schmooze, for that one)

Using this process should help you establish your goals at any stage in the Web design process. The more information you have going into it, the better you’ll be able to communicate your goals with your Web consulting partner.

Here is an example of a landing page we designed for a client’s pay-per-click ad campaign in the data center business to give you some ideas:

LF LaunchEntirePage Get the Most Leads from Your Website

Live View of New Wicker Park Street Mural by Ray Noland and Hebru Brantley

Astek is sponsoring the 8th Annual Silver Room Sound System Block Party with a webcam monitoring the first ever collaboration between renowned Chicago artists Ray Noland and Hebru Brantley. The “WE COME IN PEACE” mural on Evergreen just west of Milwaukee began production on Monday, July 19, and will be finished tomorrow during the Block Party. Come check it out!

Check out the real time footage throughout the creation of this 52-foot by 13-foot mural.

live2 Live View of New Wicker Park Street Mural by Ray Noland and Hebru Brantley

Facebook Lets the Cohen out of the bag

Last week I was attempting to surprise my girlfriend by taking her to see Leonard Cohen in concert. At some point I must have RSVP’ed to the event on Facebook, as you can see from the screenshot she saw on her Facebook page the day before the show. Facebook invited her to the show by telling her that I was attending! Since I had told her to block off the night, it wasn’t too hard to put it together. (Well, that and the fact that I made her listen to Leonard Cohen songs all week. icon smile Facebook Lets the Cohen out of the bag

This reminds me a bit of the Beacon advertising disaster Facebook tried launching a couple of years ago.

Lesson: If you are trying to surprise someone, don’t tell the biggest gossip hound on the planet — Facebook!

Picture 182 Facebook Lets the Cohen out of the bag

Our own Andrew Crowe runs his first marathon!

We couldn’t be prouder of the first member of the Astek team to complete the Chicago Marathon. He clocked in at 4:03:28 last Sunday, which is great especially for a first-timer! Andrew’s an inspiration to us all, inside the office and out. I took the photo below after the 24-mile mark in his final push and got him airborne.

IMG 2031 2 41 Our own Andrew Crowe runs his first marathon!

BlogWell Re-cap

Back from BlogWell — a riveting, fast-paced look at how some of the big guys do social media. I caught presentations from The Mayo Clinic, Proctor & Gamble, Sharpie, and Molson (who filled a spot at the last minute and brought much beer). Consistent themes included:

  • Start with a simple campaign or technology, then grow.
  • It’s not about marketing. It’s about interacting.
  • Be proactive about transparency and disclosure.
  • Don’t pour beer into a frosty mug (drop a note in the comments to find out why)

I was especially struck by the presentation from Susan Wessel at Sharpie (and not just because of the limited edition Barack Obama Sharpie’s), who indicated that for all their visibility, Sharpie is actually a pretty small company. As the primary PR rep for the company, she engaged in blogging and Twitter on her own time. I think this is the way it’s going to be for businesses for the foreseeable future who are unwilling or unable to commit additional resources to social media campaigns. In this case, she wanted to prove its value and the only way to do that was to do it. This is truer of blogging than any other form of marketing I’ve seen. The worst thing you can do is never start.

Maybe I especially remember Susan since I got her very last limited edition Barack Obama sharpie marker. Good word of mouth there.

Here are a couple of photos of Andy Sernovitz from GasPedal/The Blog Council and Adam Moffat from Molson mid-beer:

img 0007 BlogWell Re cap

img 0008 BlogWell Re cap

Here’s a good write-up on BlogWell from Chicago Tech Report.

World, Welcome to Chicago

I rather enjoyed and completely agree with this article about Chicago coming of age. We’ve always known how great our city is, but now the rest of the world can get to know us as well. It took us longer to get here because we subscribe to the midwestern ideals of working and raising families. Chicago is, after all, still fundamentally a blue collar town. But it’s the winter grit that has made us strong. It’s this grit that made Obama who he is and what got him elected. Hats off, Chicago. I’ve never been more proud.

img 0964 2 2 World, Welcome to Chicago

Halloween Critical Mass

The newest member of the Astek team, Andrew Crowe, and I set out after work to join the Halloween Critical Mass. It was loads of fun, and I think we succeeded in ticking off some drivers in the process as well. Thanks Andrew for the great photo.

2993312349 3ee2c0bb9a1 Halloween Critical Mass

Obama Tax Calculator

Taxcutfacts.org is an innovative tool from the Obama campaign, giving voters a simple web calculator to see for themselves how each candidate’s tax plans will directly affect them rather than selling them on some generalized sentiment about a plumber who may or may not represent the people.

Next Page »