The creed of the New Broadcasters!
We create and share what we find most interesting and meaningful. We talk about the things that matter most to us. We watch what we want, when we want, and tell others about what we are watching and how to start watching it. Being our authentic selves is respected and appreciated in our community. We do not put down or mock others for their beliefs, but engage in conversations and interact directly with those whom we find most interesting, those who are in need of help, inspiration, entertainment, or simply someone in which to share lives. Our goal is to influence and to educate those around us, not through manipulation or crafty schemes, but by establishing genuine and trusting relationships online and offline.
New Twitter Video Search Tool
Twitter is a fabulous networking and communication tool, but as many of us know, Twitter is also an incredible real time search engine. Twitter is an ever flowing river of instant messages filled with links, key words, opinions, and conversations about every topic you can imagine. All of these millions of posts are happening simultaneously, so how do we desiffer all of this fresh content? How do we make sense of it all? Well, Twitter’s got tools!
In my Twitter stream this morning I came across a link from my tweep, @mashable. It talks about Twitmatic a snazzy search engine that tracks Twitter trends. They added real time video search into the mix! As a video marketer myself, I might have to spend some time today seeing what it can do.
Your personality can be a great marketing tool.
Jennifer Horsley, from Habitat Floral and I worked together to create a promo video that was not so much about “promoting” in the typical sense. When I say “typical” promotion I mean telling the prospect everything that you can do for them in a “sit and listen” type fashion. Sometimes that style works, but not always.
www.missoula.com/mec.
Customers purchase from those they trust and like personally. A genuine smile and a twinkle in the eye can say “do business with me” more so than coming out and saying “trust me, please do business with me.”

