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Creative Digital Experiences from Cold, Curiosity and Courage

November 18, 2016 by Niklas Myhr Leave a Comment

Daniel Ilić, North Kingdom at Chapman University 1
Daniel Ilić, North Kingdom

Always happy to see examples of a symbiosis between my old world of Sweden and my new world of California. Such was the case when I had the honor of hosting a representative of the fascinating digital creative agency success factory North Kingdom in my Internet/Social Media Marketing class at Chapman University. During an enlightening presentation, Daniel Ilić, who heads up the US operation and serves as the Executive Creative Director and Partner of North Kingdom, shone a light on what makes up their culture and explained how it helps them produce world-class digital content and experiences for top brands such as Disney, Google, Beats by Dre, Netflix, Lucasfilm, UFC, Toyota, Volvo, LG Electronics, McDonald's, and Lego. During Daniel's presentation, some themes of the North Kingdom culture emerged and they were very consistent with the picture painted by Daniel's predecessor in the US, Mr. Jakob Nylund, who helped prepare our Business in Scandinavia MBA travel group what a Scandinavian business culture is all about a couple of years ago.

A Frozen Land Breeds Remarkable Creativity

North Kingdom was founded in the city of Skellefteå in Västerbotten County up in northern Sweden. During the long, cold, and dark winters, not everyone could play for Skellefteå AIK, the team that has completely dominated Swedish elite hockey over the last decade. Nor could everyone achieve international pop success like legendary Skellefteå bands The Wannadies, This Perfect Day, or The Drowners (all contemporaries by the way of my brother David Myhr‘s band The Merrymakers). Left over were some childhood friends who bonded in the Skellefteå AIK youth soccer team before forming North Kingdom where they eventually found an outlet for their own form of creativity in helping international brands create unique digital experiences.

Just like my own hometown of Piteå in Norrbotten County an hour north, Skellefteå is part of what is now marketed as Swedish Lapland as creative entrepreneurs have turned ice cold winters from a liability to a treasure. You can achieve global awareness and attract international visitors with the icy offerings such as the ICEHOTEL, northern lights, dogsledding, igloo weekends, or with Japanese-style “Yukigassen” snowball fights. Even Facebook found that frozen is golden as they established its first major data center up in the city of Luleå partially thanks to the fact that the cold climate reduces the costs of cooling the data server halls. Now other international brands such as BMW Group has also found its way to “The Node Pole” at the Fortlax Data Center in Piteå founded by my friend Anders Berglund.

A Nomad's perspectiveBy still having the bulk of their operations based up in Skellefteå, North Kingdom, mainly serving international clients, always comes in as an outsider and thereby is in a better position to see things differently than people inside a bubble would. “A nomad's perspective is always different” as Daniel expressed it.

Daniel Ilić also stressed that the winter darkness gives you creative opportunities simply because the mere thought that a small company up in arctic Sweden could compete and do business with global brands is so absurd that it spurs people up there in the cold darkness to come up with some really crazy ideas and to experiment with studid things that sometimes turn out to be quite remarkable. And that, remarkability, is exactly what is in short supply in an age when being different is a requirement to catch the attention of people in an ocean of sameness. “Safe is risky,” and bad or even bizarre ideas are what you need to get your ideas to spread as Seth Godin emphasized in a TED Talk.

Cultural Traits of Curiosity and Courage

North Kingdom Culture Curiosity Courage Nyfikenhet ModI specifically asked Daniel Ilić to share not only some digital communication insights and expertise but also to teach my students at least two words of Swedish. The two words he chose, “nyfikenhet” (curiosity) and “mod” (courage) turned out to perfectly capture the essence of the cultural traits that beyond the cold climate help explain why this small Swedish firm of North Kingdom has been able to acheive such astounding and award-winning success at the Cannes Lions Festival, etc.

Nobody gets hired by North Kingdom unless they can demonstrate an insatiable curiosity, i.e., they are motivated by their “nyfikenhet” constantly searching for new insights, inspiration, and knowledge and then people share what they have learned by teaching others. Teaching is highly valued and one of the founders, David Eriksson, is a former High School teacher.

Curiosity also helps North Kingdom learn from the customers with more intent by listening more carefully and trying to understand what their real issues are. Sometimes, this means speaking to the customers for hours on the phone mainly letting the client let off some steam about what is going on in their worlds.

Daniel Ilić, North Kingdom at Chapman University 3When it comes to courage or “mod,” Daniel means that staff get emboldened by an extremely supportive team spirit that characterizes North Kingdom. People feel that they can stretch the envelope with out-of-the-box ideas as discussed above as they work collaboratively in teams getting instant feedback and where they constantly spur each other on. Gone are the days when creative agency work was done in siloed departments of single-area specialists and North Kingdom seems to have found the formula for team-based success.

Scandinavian Hours and Vacation

Daniel Ilić, North Kingdom at Chapman University 2Finally, Daniel Ilić, explained how he worked hard to maintain a Swedish managerial style even as he heads up the US subsidiary. For example, if he finds someone working in the office at 6:30 pm, he kicks them out asking them what they are still doing there, that they should be going home and that he should join them on the way out! Similarly, the Swedish minimum vacations of five or six weeks are also “enforced” 🙂 In the end, healthy and happy employees are better and more creative employees. Which reminds me, I should go to bed now, so good night!

Filed Under: Chapman University, Digital Marketing, Featured2, Marketing, Scandinavia, Social Media, Sweden

Social Content Marketing Talk and Master Class in Gothenburg

January 26, 2016 by Niklas Myhr Leave a Comment

Niklas Myhr, Social Content Marketing keynote, KNTNT
Niklas Myhr keynote on Social Content Marketing at KNTNT
Niklas Myhr, Social Content Marketing keynote, KNTNT
View from stage

Enjoyed quite the whirlwind day yesterday when I paid a visit to Gothenburg on Sweden’s “left coast” and had a busy program together with my good friends and hospitable local hosts Pia and Thomas of KNTNT. Under the heading Social Content Marketing, I spoke to a full house of 180 attendees for a breakfast talk and then taught a full-day Content Marketing Master Class to a high-caliber group of marketing communications managers, consultants, and executives.

Niklas Myhr and Frida Boisen at KNTNT
Niklas Myhr and Frida Boisen at KNTNT

Digital Success Principles with Frida Boisen

I was also very pleased that we were able to bring in two intriguing guest appearances. Leading Swedish social media expert Frida Boisen shared perspectives on how content can catch fire on social media and she particularly stressed the importance of bringing in the emotional element of communication for people to care. This and more can be found in her best-selling book Digital Succé, check it out 🙂

Content Marketing Success with Mark W Schaefer

Mark Schaefer, Content Marketing Master Class, KNTNT, Gothenburg, Niklas Myhr
Mark Schaefer guest in Content Marketing Master Class

In the afternoon Swedish time, international content marketing thought leader Mark W. Schaefer joined us for a virtual session from Knoxville, Tennessee, during which he shared the thesis he presents in his groundbreaking book The Content Code. He stressed the importance of nurturing your so-called Alpha Audience, the relatively few followers you have who are regularly sharing your content. In fact, Mark Schaefer suggests that may be doomed if you do not start worrying more about taking good care of these ambassadors as their trust and ambassadorship may be the most valuable asset you have as competition for attention will only get worse. He cited an estimate that by year 2020, the amount of content will go up another five times from today's already crowded web.

Social Media Marketing vs. Content Marketing

KNTNT Radio podcast, Thomas Barregren, Pia Tegborg, Niklas Myhr
KNTNT Radio podcast interview by Thomas Barregren and Pia Tegborg

It is not surprising that it is challenging to discuss the interrelationship between social media marketing and content marketing as both terms are relatively undefined and are also undergoing changes in terms of how they are understood over time. That being said, social media marketing encompasses communications across a wide variety of social networks and stresses the interactive nature of communications amongst a group of people whereas content marketing takes as its point of departure a piece of content that should fulfill a number of criteria such as adding value and driving profitable customer action, albeit indirectly. This is the definition of content marketing that I used in my presentation:

“Content marketing is the strategic marketing approach of creating and distributing valuable, relevant and consistent content to attract and acquire a clearly defined audience – with the objective of driving profitable customer action.”

– Joe Pulizzi, Content Marketing Institute

Content Marketers becoming Professors

One aspect of content marketing that many struggle with is the extent to which they can talk about their own products and solutions in their content. While I am not going so far as saying that you are not allowed to mention your own product in your content marketing, the most effective content marketers seem to stay away from it to the largest extent possible. As a marketing professor, I have noted how content marketers are communicating and behaving more and more as professors these days as they are adding value to prospective and existing customers by teaching them ways to solve their problems irrespective of specific product purchases. It is best illustrated by the quote by Jon Ferrara of Nimble when he said:

If you teach people to fish, they’ll figure out you sell fishing poles.

– Jon Ferrara

During the day, I covered four areas in which social media marketing and content marketing are interdependent and discussed how each can benefit from the other:

  1. Social Content Marketing, Niklas Myhr, The Social Media Professor
    Social Content Marketing

    Listening on Social Media for Content Marketing Ideas. What are the questions they ask on social media? On what platforms do they search for information? What are their frustrations?

  2. Connecting to an audience suitable to your business using relevant content. By offering content that is particularly valuable to your target market, you can both attract the right type of audience to connect with you and identify themselves such as giving you their email address at the same time as you may even repel the wrong type of audience that sees little interest in the content that you offer.
  3. Chapman University gradutate Filip Westlander, Josefine Berglund, Per Ericson
    With recent Chapman University grad Filip Westlander, his girlfriend Josefine Berglund, and my cousin Per Ericson

    Engaging. How can you get your followers to not only consume but also share your content on their social media platforms?

  4. Creating. How can you motivate your followers to contribute their content for you to use on your platforms?

So, have you wondered about the relationship between social media marketing and content marketing? I am curious to learn about your thoughts and experiences so please let me know in the comments below!

Frida Boisen guest in Content Marketing Master Class, KNTNT, Niklas Myhr
Frida Boisen's guest lecture during my Content Marketing Master Class
The Myhr Family, Piteå, Sweden, KNTNT, Niklas Myhr
The Myhr Family back in the Piteå days (me with blue pants)
With KNTNT team Thomas Barregren, Pia Tegborg, Fabian Sörqvist
Thanks to the KNTNT team of Thomas Barregren, Pia Tegborg, and Fabian Sörqvist

Filed Under: Content Marketing, Digital Marketing, Featured2, Scandinavia, Social Media, Speaking, Sweden Tagged With: Featured

Testing a new Social Media Management Tool: AgoraPulse

September 18, 2015 by Niklas Myhr Leave a Comment

I'm excited to announce that I have been offered the opportunity to try out the popular social media management tool AgoraPulse for a year courtesy of its Founder & CEO Emeric Ernoult. While it is my belief that many social media managers out there use more tools than they need and I stress to students to keep things simple, AgoraPulse is one that consistently has been recommended to me by people I trust. For example, I know that this is a tool of choice of my friend Antonio Calero featured on the picture with sunscreen on his nose at the “beach party” during the formidable Social Media Marketing World.

Apparently, AgoraPulse helps you manage both social media listening and engagement in an authentic manner on Facebook, Twitter, and on Instagram and has been rated very highly elsewhere. Whether I will like it or not and whether AgoraPulse will become a staple tool I recommend to my students remains to be seen but if that turns out to be the case, I'll let you know and thank you Emeric for the opportunity!

Me and my Chapman University student volunteers at the Social Media Marketing World Beach Party with Daniel J Lewis, Antonio Calera, Tyler Anderson, Michael Stelzner, Leslie Samuel, Heather Dopson, and Matt Jones.
Me and my Chapman University student volunteers at the Social Media Marketing World Beach Party with Daniel J Lewis, Antonio Calero, Tyler Anderson, Michael Stelzner, Leslie Samuel, Heather Dopson, and Matt Jones.

 

Disclosure: Some of the links on this website are so-called “affiliate links” but please note that I only recommend products or services that I have good reason to believe will add value to my readers.

Filed Under: Chapman University, Social Media

Video Content Marketing with Bryan Elliott

April 13, 2015 by Niklas Myhr 2 Comments

Bryan Elliott at Chapman University with Niklas MyhrHad the pleasure of having Bryan Elliott of BehindtheBrandTV back as a guest speaker in my Internet/Social Media Marketing class at Chapman University. Bryan has previously shared his story with my classes of how he built up a community around actions sports with partners, advertisers, and marketers evolving into the LinkedOC network for which I am proud to serve as an Advisory Board Member. This time, Bryan Elliott focused on video marketing as a form of content marketing and he thought that everyone should have their own YouTube channel and he pointed out that some people are really killing it on YouTube.

Publishing videos on YouTube is a great way to demonstrate your expertise and when people start viewing and sharing your videos, that will serve as social proof going forward. But has the train already left the station? No, Bryan Elliott still sees great opportunities with video marketing and finds it surprising that not more people are on board yet in spite of YouTube having been around for a decade. He thinks people are held back because they don't think they have the equipment needed, know what to say, or they feel uncomfortable seeing or hearing themselves on a video.

“If you didn't already start publishing videos on YouTube, today is the best time to get started! In a sea of blogs, etc, if a video doesn't exist for a particular search, you can bubble straight to the top of that category as Google wants to promote YouTube videos for searches.” – Bryan Elliott

Bryan Elliott on Video Marketing at Chapman University with Niklas MyhrThe fact that many people and brands are not yet producing videos, makes the opportunity even greater for those who make the most of it. YouTube videos could even be referred to as a guerilla tactic. In terms of being found, every word spoken on that video gets indexed and transcribed by the Google robots.

Bryan Elliott jumped on the video marketing train himself and decided to produce high-caliber interviews with successful entrepreneurs and have featured celebrities such as Seth Godin, Marc Cuban, Tim Ferriss, Lewis Howes, Chris Brogan, Gary Vaynerchuk on his show BehindtheBrand.tv. See below for one such interview with Seth Godin:

His content is something that he uses for content marketing purposes and syndicates it with major publications such as Huffington Post, Entrepreneur Magazine, Business Insider, etc, not asking for much more than exposure himself. This way, he is getting millions of views of his content each month but the true value for him is that by providing value to the many, he will also get fruits falling over the fence in his lap in the form of opportunities for his video production company. Every day, he is getting between 20 and 50 pitches for working with him. While most proposals are not very worthwhile to pursue, he also gets about five great opportunities for collaborative projects each day such as when Jessica Biel's PR people called him rather than the other way around.

The most valuable advice Bryan Elliott has received was from Seth Godin who told him that the thing that is lacking most is initiative. The thing with initiative is that noone is giving it to you. You have to take it yourself. People are waiting to be picked but Prince Charming is not coming. You can hold your breath and wait your whole life. Therefore, Bryan really pushed my students to really start developing their online platforms and include video in such initiatives to stand out as they will try getting a job.

Said and done, would be honored if you'd be amongst my first subscribers over at Myhr.tv 🙂

LIVE on #Periscope: At #ChapmanU talking video marketing https://t.co/npPnEeKEiw

— Bryan Elliott (@BryanElliott) April 13, 2015

Filed Under: Chapman University, Content Marketing Tagged With: Bryan Elliott

3 Lean Startup Content Marketing Hacks with Charles Vickery

April 1, 2015 by Niklas Myhr Leave a Comment

Former student of mine (MBA 2009) Charles Vickery, now community manager at Sourcegraph, visited my class via Google Hangout and shared some hacks through which a small tech startup with a low marketing budget and a very small team can still get significant attention. These are some marketing hacks that he shared with my class:

  • They hired some Chapman University film school students to record a minor event for forty people that now on their YouTube channel has sixty thousand views.
  • They printed SourceGraph t-shirts for $11 that they use to carpet bomb the startup street in San Francisco with. This apparently has brought a lot of attention to their brand.
  • They went to a tech conference and live blogged the whole conference and in the process, they became the de facto live blog of the conference with hundreds of thousands of views of their blog.

Everything is news and you can reslice it multiple ways – Charles Vickery

You should also check out when Charles Vickery was featured by the Huffington Post as an opera singing, cocktail-serving “Task Rabbit” assembling furniture. That's also a way to build a personal brand!

Filed Under: Chapman University, Content Marketing, Personal Branding, Social Media

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