Vining the Red Carpet at The Shorty Awards

Vine celebrities

A few weeks ago I was asked by my friend Megan, who works at The Shorty Awards, to help volunteer by taking over their Vine account and Vining celebrities on Red Carpet before the award ceremony.

I’m no stranger to working on social media for live events, but my other speciality is recognizing influencers, especially on Vine. This was my first time live-Vining for an awards show and there was definitely an overwhelming amount of content. Having already known these key Vine influencers helped me narrow down what to capture in order to optimize for the right audience, in other words rubbing elbows with the rich and Vine famous.

After the ceremony these Vine’s resulted in a 2,000+ follower growth on The Shorty Awards Vine account. Here’s a few of the Vine’s I captured at the event.

Make Me Laugh! How to Stand Out on Vine

KC James InchWorm Vine

♫ Might as well face it, I’m addicted to Vine. ♫

Truth is this obsession has only been going on for about 2 months now. When I wanted to start my own “30 Day Vine Challenge”. I wanted to challenge myself to start taking a video a day of NYC life, then gradually became obsessed with the Vine community and all the Vine ‘personalities’. At first I wanted to make this into a ‘Top Video Personalities/Comedians to Watch” list, which it is. But the more I did my research the more I noticed how the top Viners each really have their own niche.

Let’s start with some videos.

Note: Best way to view these is by turning on/off the sound to each Vine one at a time. 

KC James

Had to put KC at the top of my list because he’s a personal favorite. He’s hilarious and always changing his Vines up where most others on this list will stick to only one of two Vine themes they’re known for, but not KC. He has a number of “Vine Series” including:
How to Recover After an Embarrassing Slip
https://twitter.com/iamkcjames/status/335109992803868672
“Magic Vines” – Which are stop-motion Vines that create interesting concepts (flying, disappearing, etc.)

https://twitter.com/iamkcjames/status/336206197675937793
How To’s:

https://twitter.com/iamkcjames/status/334824925925892096

https://twitter.com/iamkcjames/status/330824052136636416

https://twitter.com/iamkcjames/status/327968498267602944

Series: How To Be An Orange Country Mom

https://twitter.com/iamkcjames/status/328669909364113410
Series: How To Concern People In The Bathroom:

https://twitter.com/iamkcjames/status/327207341894291457
Series: How To Spot An InchWorm At (Wal-Mart/Target)

https://twitter.com/iamkcjames/status/327523689518215168
And last but not least, his amazing basketball shots:

https://twitter.com/iamkcjames/status/322200473908170752

DirtyCurt

Best known for Huckle Bee Bob (He’s even brought this costume to Europe) and pretty much torturing is puppy with cat noises and dressing him up as a triceratops.

Nick Mastodon

Best know for his music/movie/commercial mashups:

Woodsie

Best know for demon baby and my personal favorites are when he spends time at home playing with his daughter’s toys:

Nick Confalone

Best known for Vine’s of his ridiculously cute baby:

https://twitter.com/nickconfalone/status/323599453472841728

https://twitter.com/nickconfalone/status/330494378571358208

Rudy Mancuso

Rudy hasn’t posted too many of his Vine’s on Twitter. And Vine hasn’t quite figured out an easier way to share Vine’s other than your own but I did manage to find a “Best of Rudy on YouTube” — That’s right, someone other than Rudy has too much time on their hands.

He’s best known for his characters Isaac and Alberto, Isaac as Siri, chair spinning, mi madre, foreign parents (aka making his mom say really long sentences in English), and Lion King in random places. These all make sense when you follow his Vine’s as religiously as I do.


Here’s two more of my personal favorites:

https://twitter.com/rudymancuso/status/340970489444974592

WhoisMaxwell

Max is probably best known for his creepy mustache, yelling, and how to videos. Here’s a few of my favorites:

https://twitter.com/whoismaxwell/status/339487223265239040

https://twitter.com/whoismaxwell/status/327261544780021760

https://twitter.com/whoismaxwell/status/316291703675949061

https://twitter.com/whoismaxwell/status/315962299653435392

Takeaways:

The key to standing out on Vine? These Viner’s create content that is unique, interesting, and funny, while pushing their ideas to the next level. All these Viners are known for their own unique themes, series, and ideas. This translates to a community of Viners. Remake Vines and collaboration between the rest of the Vine community start to begin.

I’m always so surprised when I see that most of these great Viners are from Cali, they all know each other and show up in each others Vines. And if they’re not from the same state they do collaborations or remakes of each others work. It’s amazing when it unfolds.

You can follow all these great talents by looking up their names on the Vine App — as well as myself, Nicole Monahan (shameless plug!) I mostly Vine NYC life, office puppies, events, and subways musicians. 🙂

Inside the Brand: Warby Parker

Warby Parker Youtube Customer Service

If there is such a thing as being obsessed with a brand, my top brand would have to be Warby Parker. Last month I got a chance to speak with Carlo Ang, from the Warby Parker’s Social Media team. Carlo had a wealth of great information but there was one thing that really stuck with me. When I asked what do you do to keep up with the developments in your industry, his response was “we conduct weekly brand research to see what other brands are doing in the space.” I love competitor research and seeing what other brands are doing in social. This gave me a great idea to do this for my own website, and what better way to kick it off with Warby Parker. 🙂

Before I begin, I think it’s important to get into the genius mind of Warby’s CEO Neil Blumenthal. If you ever have a chance to hear him speak, do it. I’ve heard him speak at 3 conferences already and wrote a recap of his speech during Social Media Week this year. Most importantly, when it comes to business and new ideas, Warby considers these questions first and for most:

  • Is this a unique experience?
  • Is this authentic?
  • Is it interesting and fun?
  • Does it have a compelling narrative?
  • Do people want to talk about it? Is it sharable?
  • Does it do good in the world?
  • Are we consistently learning?

Now let’s take a look into something I like to call, “you’re doing it right.” The most notable things I’ve seen Warby do over the years is heavily customer service based while connecting both the physical and digital space.

Best examples include:

  • Custom Customer Service: Let’s face it video content is hot right now. Warby has combined the best way to package video content and offer amazing customer support all into one. You’d think it would be best to make one video to answer the same question 10 people have been asking, but when you personalize these videos these customers are so impressed that they want to share it with everyone. It then reaches 10 times more eyeballs! This turns into a unique personal experience. Customer appreciation and support is very hard to come by these days. 

Warby Parker Youtube Customer Service

  • Warby Parker Class Trip: Warby Parker had this amazing idea to set off on a tricked out yellow school bus across nine cities in six months, bringing their showroom experience to America. Who else would kill for that job? This idea is so genius. Initially they began as an online ordering platform. Their big hook was sending you 5 samples to try on at home… Problem solved, people love to touch, feel, and play with a product, right? But Warby Parker didn’t just stop there, they planned a showroom on wheels and took off. 

Warby Parker Class Trip

  • Annual Report: Something that Neil has said before is, “we’ve noticed that being transparent and vulnerable with each other forms deeper relationships with both our staff and customers.” What better way to do this than by allowing everyone to take a look into your annual report. This report was designed by Warby employees who are made it fun and personal.

Warby Parker Annual Report 2012

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My 2¢ on gaps and new opportunities:

1. Warby Parker seems to be very influence by literature. Whether it is in their showrooms, events, or name itself. It may sound corny but I think a great opportunity lies in a future book club or a book drive for those in need.

2. Their growth is so massive. I’d like to see the strategy they have for managing each individual customer service video.

3. They should have taken a field trip to New Orleans and visited the pharmacy museum, because this history in eyewear should be shared with the masses: New Orleans Pharmacy Museum Vintage Eyewear

4. Weekly day-in the life video, vine series, or Instagram where they follow a Warby employee to see their perceptive through the lenses. It would make for some pretty interesting content, even highlighting who came into the stores or any “office personality type” content always performs best on Instagram. Tattly does this well. I’ve honestly never seen a brand have a higher IG audience than other social media accounts with so few photos.

5. If they’re going the route of celebrating people with iconic frames – Lisa Loeb, hello!

6. Rumors are that they’re expanding, which should come as no surprise. Final thought would be to use your space to connect with your community. Host events (book clubs, jam sessions, speaker discussion, create your own film festival, or even celebrate these iconic eyewear legends with a birthday party.) Space is a vital resource in NY use it and connect with people.

 

 

 

#SMWNYC Recap: Parties, Stories, and Jeopardy

Social Media Week NYC 2013

Last week was one hell of a roller coaster. I’d like to keep up with my goal of at least 1 blog post a week. It’s been a major struggle with the two new jobs, but as a magician told me this weekend (yes, you heard that right), you have to do what you love. It took him 3 years of practicing his craft and is finally doing what he loves. I met him this past weekend at a non-profit gala I helped volunteer for, he made a valid point — you can always have your day job but should always at least have your side art, your passion projects. And that’s exactly why I continue to push forward with my writing.

During Social Media Week, I successfully made it through 7 events and produced my first (sold out) event with DigitalDUMBO. As a promise to myself I wanted to make a recap of all the events and panels I attended. Thanks for bearing through this novel, but I promise there’s a ton of great takeaways.

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Tuesday, February 19, 2013:

6:00-8:00pm: Doing It Live: The Integration of Social in Live Events

#SMWDoingItLive

Bridget Carey – Senior Editor @CNet – @BridgetCarey

Ben Hindman – Co-founder and CEO @SplashThat – @bjamin32

David Adler – Founder and CEO @BizBash_News – @DavidAdlerLinkedIn

Shawn Busteed – SVP, Business Strategy @TBAGlobal – @Busteed

Lauren Drell – Campaigns Editor @Mashable – @drelly

Social Media Week New York 2013- Doing It Live Panel

– Always follow-up after an event. Don’t do a post-event survey, instead try a photo gallery, they have higher traffic rates.

– With Live events – Twitter can be a simple way to outline what happened when you’re writing a story, especially useful for journalists and writers.

– Make it easy on attendees. Provide a list of the speakers, twitter handles, and hashtags.

– The decor is the event. Make sure your brand is on everything and do it in a unique way.

– Think of creative ways to thank attendees.

– A great way to influence people to tweet is to make them look awesome at an event or give them something awesome to photograph or share. Don’t make tweeting forced.

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Wednesday, February 20, 2013

9:30am-10:30am: A Conversation with Neil Blumenthal, Co-Founder and Co-CEO, Warby Parker

#SWMHQ

– Businesses can create good in the world.

– One of the reasons why people leave their jobs isn’t because of compensation, it’s because they stopped learning.

– [Warby Parker] always trying to merge the physical and the digital. Connecting people on an emotional level.

Examples of this innovation:

– Always asks themselves the following questions:

  • Is this a unique experience?
  • Is this authentic?
  • Does it have a compelling narrative?
  • Does it do good in the world?
  • Are we consistently learning?

– If you want to build relationships you need to let people in and be vulnerable.

– Give people a reason to share and they will.

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6:00- 7:30pm: The 140 Character Resume: How Your Social Media Footprint Can Get You Hired.

#SMW140Resume

Lars Schmidt, Head of Talent Acquisition and Innovation @NPR – @ThisisLars

Sharon Feder, COO @Mashable – @Sharonfeder

Brooke Camp, Talent Acquisition Leader New and Digital @NBC Universal – @BCeenByMe

Kathryn Minshew, Founder and CEO @DailyMuse – @kmin

Hagos Mehreteab, Director of Talent Acquisition at AppNexus @AppNexus – @gosnew

Social Media Week New York 2013 140 Resume

– Have an online presence and tailor it to your personality.

– Build your own projects. Create content and blogs.

– Consistency in your online profiles is important. Before you even start, scrub your online identity. Be professionally attractive & approachable.

– With every single message you send, you’re making an impression. Up to you if it’s good or bad.

– One big mistake is to ask for something from people you follow before you build a relationship with them.

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Thursday, February 21, 2013

9:30am-11:00am: The Evolution of the Modern Community Manager

#SMWCommunity

Casey Carter- Social Media and Digital Marketing Manager @SoulCycle –@caseyculture

Kristin Maverick – Director, Earned Media @BarbarianGroup – @kmarerick

Joanna Firneno – Brand Strategist at @Percolate – @joannaf

Brian Ries – Senior Social Media Editor at @Newsweek and @DailyBeast – @moneyries

Mike Hayes – Social Media Editor @Buzzfeed – @michaelhayes

Social Media Week New York 2013 The Evolution of the Modern Community Manager

– The old way community management was done, included relying on content calendars. You’d develop the calendar and put it out. But with working on a hockey brand (Brian Ries) we noticed that the conversation escalated during game time which meant after 6pm — after working hours. There was a lack of real-time.

– You need to be flexible when real-time event happen. With Breaking News Buzzfeed comments within the first 15 minutes to elevate the conversation. People think if you’re not tweeting and commenting that much, then you’re not really there.

– How can brands work/change real-time. – Create a foundation on your brand and voice. Example: Oreo has a style guide. Like Oreo and the Super Bowl. It has to have that perfect formula. It blended the Blackout Meme with America’s love for Super Bowl Ads. They did something similar during the Grammy’s and it didn’t have the same effect because people don’t care as much about ads during the Grammys.

– When jumping on new platforms (Vine, Rebelmouse). First contact these companies, seeing if you can secure a domain and then set up a coffee meeting and see what the best approaches are for your brand. Secure your social presence.

– Social is just another piece of the business pie.

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12:00pm-1:30pm: The Golden Age of Digital Storytelling

#SMWBuzzfeed

Josh Sternberg – Media & Publishing Reporter at Digiday- @joshsternberg

Jon Steinberg – President and COO at Buzzfeed – @jonsteinberg

Lee Nadler – Marketing Communications Manager at MINI USA- @leenadler

Sabrina Caluori – Vice President, Social Media and Performance Marketing at HBO & Cinemax- @sabrinacaluori

Social Media Week New York 2013 The Golden Age of Storytelling

– Connect the world through conversations. Example when HBO did a Mistakes Girls Make hashtag and content, this happened alongside the conversations of New Years Resolutions.

– You can’t do anything good without actually working on it.

– We’re moving away from interrupted experiences (homepage take overs) into more custom emotional experiences. Example: Mini’s End of the World Campaign.

– When jumping on new platforms (Vine, Rebelmouse. ect.). Workshop with it, gather your team up and first understand: What’s my personal experience with this?

– Humanize and connect with users in real life. Try not to automate everything. Don’t be sales-y, understand the point of view of what makes this product or TV show awesome and be authentic.

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6:30pm – 9:00pm: dd:SOCIAL SMW – “Majors and Minors” Presented by Digital DUMBO & Translation

Recap of photos from running my first DigitalDUMBO Event.

IMG_1060 IMG_1063 IMG_1071 dd:SOCIAL Social Media Week New York 2013– “Majors and Minors” Presented by Digital DUMBO & Translation

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Friday February 22, 2013: 

2:30pm-4:00pm – The Future of Branded Experiences

#SMWMKG

Nick Parish – Editorial Director, Americas at Contagious – @paryshnikov

Dave Brown – Director, Digital Strategy at MKG – @holidaymatinee

Social Media Week New York 2013 The Future of Branded Experiences

The best part of this panel was that it involved a DIY Jeopardy board. Leave to Dave to make magic among the digital and physical space. The “host” read off an audience member’s Twitter handle and they got to choose from each category on the board. The two panelists Dave Brown and Nick Parish would give their answers. Everyone was a winner.  And it all started with this quote:

Do what you do so well that they will want to see it again and bring their friends. – Walt Disney

Final Takeaways:

– You don’t need to buy your voice in the world.

– The biggest danger brands can do not being interesting enough.

– Data can be used to make smarter decisions about events by using online data to help make offline decisions.

– Marketplace Disruption – Airbnb is changing the hotel industry and challenging how hotel’s need to rethink their business models. Plated and Blue Apron is changing the food industry. Changing how Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s will rethink their models. Who Gives a Crap is changing the way we think about sanitation and the fundamental need for paper goods. Skillshare reminds us we’re all teachers.

– Brands need to be more human, have a conversation. Empower your Community Manager! Everyone needs to be integrated. Sit around the same table. Brands need to start talking with us and stop talking at us. 

– People are consuming the content we write in unthinkable ways. Make content consumption a comfortable and seamless user experience – personal for anytime, anywhere, and on any device.

– We’re creating products that provide meaning to people’s lives in frictionless ways. ( Wemo, Twine, Goodnight Lamp.)

– Let’s make a human connection.

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Pass on the NYCbaton!

This week I had the honor of holding the NYCbaton. For those that aren’t familiar with NYCbaton, it’s a collaboration from the NYC instagram community. The idea is that a different New Yorker gets passed the baton (Instagram account) and has a day to shoot through the eyes of a New Yorker’s day. Recently I had the opportunity to hold it this past Wednesday.

After my first shot of the day got over 200 likes, I felt the power trip start to form.

NYCbaton Nicole Monahan First Photo of the Day, my commute

I had the attention of 2,892 people. This was the largest audience I’ve ever been faced with one-on-one. It was terrifying and overwhelming all at once. With the limit of 7 photos for the entire day, the pressure was on. This is New York, I thought, realistically there’s far too many things to take pictures of.

Instagram comes naturally to me especially when it’s on your own terms. You have complete control of your own social presence. You have no one to blame but yourself. The only question you have to ask is, do you want a huge fan base or want to be an authority of awesome. I’d chose the latter. Followers will come when you’re original, interesting, and true to yourself. However in this moment I felt like this was my one shot. It wasn’t until the first few photos that it clicked. I had to ask myself, who really cares and what exactly do they care about? The answer’s simple. They care about your day. They care about a New Yorker’s perspective. As much as I struggled to take those scenic Empire State Building shots, I knew deep down inside people could see that anywhere and at WAY better quality than from my iPhone5. What they really wanted was to see our surroundings, how we live, what it’s like to be a New Yorker. We’re like one of those rare species of tree frogs in the wildness that scientists can’t help but study. And to my surprise a lot of people commenting weren’t even from here. All that was left was to give the people what they want. At the end of the day, my personal Instagram will still be there as my own creative outlet.

Here’s how the rest of my day turned out:

NYCbaton Instagram Nicole Monahan Day in the life of a New Yorker.

NYCbaton Instagram Nicole Monahan Day in the life of a New Yorker.

NYCbaton Instagram Nicole Monahan Day in the life of a New Yorker.

NYCbaton Instagram Nicole Monahan Day in the life of a New Yorker.

NYCbaton Instagram Nicole Monahan Day in the life of a New Yorker.

NYCbaton Instagram Nicole Monahan Day in the life of a New Yorker.

Social Marketing Mondays: Typography and Image Edition

DailyCandy's August Summer Picks Guide
Back from vacation and back into the social goodness.
My first pick for this week goes out to Seamless’ Lunch for a Month Sweeps. I am personally a sucker for typography and lunch. When you combined the two it looks like a classy meal I can’t help but enter to win.
Seamless Lunch for a Month Contest
Second pick goes to DailyCandy’s August Things to do this Summer. Again the typography is what really drew me in first, I am a visual person and it worked. Plus I am a huge fan of DailyCandy’s content and the way they curate it, very tailored and polished while hooking you in.
Daily Candy 31 Days of Summer
DailyCandy 31 Days of Summer List
Third goes to Tom’s Shoes. Visuals for the win! While quickly scrolling through my Facebook news feed, this sunset really caught my attention. The timing was just right, as I saw the Facebook post at around sunset my time. As Tom’s asked their fans, “what’s the view like from behind yours?”,  the whole concept was certainly intriguing and engaging. I also noticed this post got many likes (around 7K), something I haven’t seen from them in recent posts.
Tom's Shoes Sunglasses Facebook Post

Takeaways:

A great takeaway from this week’s examples is that visuals are key and will hook your audience in. Combined that with the right timing based on your content and audience, makes for a sure fire way to successful engage with what you’re marketing. For example the Seamless was posted right before lunch time at around 11am. I noticed DailyCandy’s guide a week ago just as I was searching for last minute end of summer things to do. And as I mentioned, Tom’s I noticed yesterday at around sunset.