replyall

Enter the @pr_couture 26k Twitter Follower Giveaway with Sad Shop!

Phew. We are about to hit 26,000 followers on Twitter. In fact, we probably will get there before I finish this post!

Um. How amazing is this card?

My dear friend and old college roomie Katie Davis not only pens the most heart-wrenching sad songs you love to listen to, she also has an Etsy shop where she sells the ugliest Christmas sweaters and the best greeting cards.

Want to win one? How this works…

Submit a tweet telling us either your most embarrassing #prfail OR the worst #prfail you have ever seen/received. Make sure to use @katiedavidmusic and @pr_couture in your tweet, as well as the hashtag #prfail”

Like….

“Hey @katiedavismusic & @PR_Couture forgetting to BCC editors is my #prfail”

We will pick our two favorite tweets and ship you out a card of your very own!

Contest ends tomorrow, December 21 at 8pm PT.

GO!

 

brd

The Ultimate Social Search: How To Drive Clicks and Retweets on Twitter

With most fashion brands and PR agencies on Facebook and Twitter, it’s important to take a step back from all the liking and #followfriday-ing to consider how these platforms can be leveraged to boost your SEO. However, before leveraging these tools to promote your blog, it’s important to first look at where you are driving traffic. In the following three articles, we will examine the best ways to optimize content for search and sharing on social media.

How to drive clicks and retweets on Twitter

Before sharing a few best practices, I’ll let my colleague Chris Lightner (@clightner), VP Analytics at Edelman Digital, share a handful of retweetable SEO tips for Twitter:

Although Twitter allows for 140 characters, consider how re-tweetable your content is when writing your tweet and leave a little room for your Twitter handle. If someone re-tweets your content, will they have to edit out content in order to make their tweet fit within the 140 characters since the tweet now contains mention of your handle? More re-tweets lead to higher search rankings, so be considerate and let people re-tweet your content with ease.

 Consider what your Tweet leads in with (i.e. the first 20-30 characters) as this is what will show up in Google search results and could potentially make or break the decision for a visitor to click on the Tweet.  

People talk about how they search, so make sure you understand how others are tweeting/talking about a particular topic when writing your tweet. Are you using the right hashtags and keywords? If you were searching for content on the topic you’re tweeting about, how would you search for it in Google or Bing? Use similar long string quotes in your tweet so people find your content with consistent language for how they search.

@Macys, @cutblog and @glamourdotcom are prime examples of using relevant tags to insert their presence into the current conversations. Doing a quick search on Twitter will reveal how often a hashtag is used and its trending popularity. Just remember to change the default from top results to all results.

By using #nyfw, @cutblog is not only inserting their presence into the conversation on Twitter search, these popular event tags are many times aggregated and curated by widgets and microsites like Twitter’s #nyfw microsite sponsored by American Express.

 

@glamourdotcom also uses hashtags with two purposes: 1) optimize content for search 2) organize content similar to the print magazine.

 

Start leaving space in your tweets to allow people to easily retweet and check out Twitter search, trending topics and competitor tweets to discover (and then use) keywords to help drive more views to your tweets.

Image Source

AA-2

Five Things about Social Media that Fashion PR Often Gets Wrong

I always enjoy reading Apparel Insiders, the online magazine about the contemporary fashion industry founded by former associate publisher of both Sportswear International and Women’s Wear Daily Gus Floris. As such, I was thrilled to contribute an article for their September Issue. I chose to focus on what I find to be common, recurring mistakes made by fashion brands in the social space.


“We could argue until Betsey Johnson retires (never!) about which department should “own” social media — marketing, PR, branding, customer service? (Short answer: like your BFF’s closet, social media was made for sharing). In fashion, however, some of the greatest social media success stories occur when PR is at the helm. A quick glance through Lucky Magazine’s relatively exhaustive list of fashion brands on Twitter shows that in addition to social media darlings DKNY and Oscar PR Girl, Tibi, Elizabeth & James, and Stuart Weitzman all promote a decidedly PR-centric approach to social media. And why not? In-house fashion PR reps are connected to the day-to-day of office goings-on. In the know about everything from upcoming press placements to celebrity dressing, the fashion PR perspective can effectively extend the brand personality into social by providing “behind-the-scenes” content and, by engaging with fans and followers, build long-term rapport and loyalty between brand and consumer.

Yet, for many fashion publicists, their professional background is more pitching media than PPC, more credit checks than custom application development. As a result, the ins and outs of platforms like Facebook and Twitter are often misunderstood and misused. Here are five ways fashion brands are getting it wrong when it comes to social media strategy:”

Read the rest of this article on Apparel Insiders