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Bruton Stroube Slo-Mo Booth – LOVE!

Bruton Stroube // Slo-mo Booth Supercut from Bruton Stroube Studios on Vimeo.

ENJOY!

(link to Bruton Stroube’s blog post)

First Post on Medium: “Listen For Your Birds”

Have a look at my new post over on Medium: “Listen For Your Birds

Larry Conners and His Facebook Problem

I’ll spare you the details, as they’re available here, here, here, here, here and here. The summary is that local St. Louis TV anchor Larry Conners, who had been on the air for 34 years, was fired after alleging on his work Facebook page that a 2012 interview he did with President Obama drew the ire of the IRS. As the IRS is currently in some hot water for allegedly targeting right-leaning groups, this charge is not as crazy as it sounds.

It turns out that the IRS had started working Larry over several years previous to the Obama interview. This made his Facebook post look a little funny, and after some deliberation, KMOV terminated him. I joined Mark Reardon to discuss the situation, including a very important distinction to make: did Larry run into a Facebook problem, or a personal judgement problem that just so happened to play out on Facebook?

As always, thanks Mark for having me on your show.

CLICK HERE TO HAVE A LISTEN

And here’s a link to my friend Aaron Perlut’s piece on Forbes.com.

Meeting the People that Inspire You is Inspiring!

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Simon Sinek recently spoke at the COCAbiz Spark 2013 conference here in St. Louis. I had the good fortune of finding him in a conference room, signing hundreds of books before his talk. I asked him, “There is no rubber stamp that can adequately do this job, is there?” He laughed and said no.

Simon inspires me and his book “Start With Why” (affiliate link) made me think so differently on a range of issues. It was a thrill to meet him in person.

Amy’s Baking Company – Social Media Etiquette and Advice For People That Desperately Need It

Gordon Ramsey has a show on Fox called “Kitchen Nightmares,” where struggling or failing restaurants come to be saved. I am assuming restaurants approach him, versus the other way around, and I am thinking they do this for at least two reasons: 1. To get actual help for a business that really needs it, and 2. To get some high-profile publicity. Mr. Ramsey’s show has been on the air since 2007, a fact of which I’ve been blissfully unaware. Anyway, as it is a “reality show,” I am sure the show’s producers chop up and paste together the footage to suit their needs, paint people in the light they want them to be in, and basically manipulate the story to their end. Lots of drama, yelling, slamming of fists on tables… Gordon Ramsey is not the quiet type.

And yet, for the first time ever, he walked off a show in production and said, “You people simply cannot be helped. You’re an impossible case. I’m OUTS.” He’s British; I’m paraphrasing.

After the episode aired, the fine folks at Reddit began having a field day with it. I guess Amy and Samy took exception to the fun being poked at them and melted down HARD on Facebook. This is not the first faux pas I’ve seen a company make on social media, but the breadth and depth of this freakout was notable. Multiple posts, cursing, name calling, ALL CAPS diatribes, directly interacting with people and calling them the worst of worst names… it took Facebook by storm.

Anyway, I had a chance to briefly talk about it on Fox 2 Now with Angela Hutti. My main piece of advice here was to sleep on it. This was not one of those crises that required an immediate response. No one likes to be ganged up on and called stupid and horrible. The Yelp reviews started getting so mean and fictional – just absolutely crazy things being said. As a business owner, this would infuriate me. And it’s possible that I’d be so angry, a night’s rest would do nothing for me. However, I have typed angry emails and saved as a draft, and each time I did so, I changed up the email the next day. NEVER have I said, “Yeah, that crazy stuff, sounds like exactly what I want to convey.” Rather, I’ve softened up the message every single time I’ve slept on it. If the crisis does not call for swift response, try responding after you’ve cooled down. Your calm brain thinks so differently than your agitated brain.

Here’s a page on Huffington Post with many screenshots (WARNING: graphic language), and here’s a Buzzfeed article with much of the same. Note: both contained Youtube versions of the show, but those videos have since been taken down.

Here’s a link to the story on Fox2Now, in case the embedded video above chooses not to cooperate.

Video – A Great Way to Introduce a Product

A couple of lines of copy might have sufficed, but Square opted to SHOW people the beauty and functionality of their new product (and they used a little humor, too). I like the approach.

Friday Funnies – I Own Two Cats But Don’t Like Them This Much

You can’t hug every cat.

By the way, she is passionate about cats that don’t have homes. My friends at the Animal Protective Association feel the same way. Support your local animal shelter.

Defining Success Podcast With Zeb Welborn

I recently appeared on Zeb Welborn’s podcast “Defining Success.” We talked for about 40 minutes, covering entrepreneurship, networking and social media. Thank you Zeb for the invitation, and I hope to return when my book debuts.

HAVE A LISTEN BY CLICKING HERE

Unfriending People On Facebook

unfriending people on Facebook

When scanning your Facebook news feed, do you ever run across posts that infuriate you? Do you have certain trollers that always jump in on your posts and make comments that get your goat? Did you make Facebook friends with a stranger a year or two ago, and now you wonder why you’re staring at their meaningless updates?

Mark Reardon was in a ornery mood one night, and started unfriending the jokers in his Facebook news feed. In this radio debate, I explain to him that there’s no reason to be a big meanie. There’s a more humane way to silence the knuckleheads on Facebook.

Take a listen here to my KMOX radio interview with Mark and let me know what you think.

Don’t Tell Business Lies

Today, I’m taking part in a huge new business pitch. It’s a great opportunity for Falk Harrison, and I’m excited to take part in the effort. I told my 8 year old daughter this morning that I had a big day today. She often shares a small piece of advice with me as I drop her off at school, and this morning, she got me prepared for the big pitch:

Be yourself. And don’t tell business lies.

Honey, I’ll try my best.

Social media is not the magic elixir that immediately juices your sales, but with honesty and persistence, it’s worth the time. My daughter teaches me so much, and the lesson for me here is to never make promises you can’t keep. Refusing to tell tall tales about the supposed power and guaranteed results of social media might hurt my sales, but “telling business lies” is just not worth it to me.