Posts Tagged ‘technology’

Sacramento streams Jay Baer social media event live

By Shaun Crockett, June 2, 2011

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The Midwest has been dodging tornados, while the central north is getting pounded by one of the wettest springs in years. So when I was told about going to California for our Sacramento office’s grand opening and the Jay Baer social media event, I admit I was excited. I could endure the crippling time change to spend a few days in that wonderful California sun.

But as any farmer can tell you, Mother Nature doesn’t always cooperate. I think she has something against me.

But between unseasonably cool weather, rain, and tornadoes… YES, I said tornados, I learned a great deal and had a great time.

The AdFarm Sarcamento office sits on the 21st floor of a downtown office building, overlooking the local farmers’ market. The view of the skyline with thousands of trees lining the city is amazing.

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But our new office space was only half of what was going on. The star of the show was Jay Baer and his talk was about social media and agriculture.

Jay is a great presenter who makes social media easy to understand, no matter what level you’re at or business you’re in. He recently wrote a book called The Now Revolution – 7 Shifts to make your business faster, smarter, and more social. His talk shared some of the book’s key points with an audience consisting of people from the Social Media Club of Sacramento and the writers of influential agriculture blogs. Even people who weren’t sure how to make the social sphere work for their company, but knew they needed to start paying attention were able to take home a lot of ideas from Jay’s talk. To reach as many AdFarmers, clients, and other interested people as possible, we live streamed the event and Jay fielded questions via our Twitter hash tag, #AdFarmLive.

And if you didn’t make it to Sacramento and didn’t catch our live stream of the event, you can watch it in its entirety by clicking here for the true live experience. We haven’t edited the video, what you see is exactly what you would have experienced in our Sacramento office at the Jay Baer social media event – minus the great eats and drinks.

So take a few minutes to sit back and enjoy the show, which includes a panel discussion with a few of AdFarm’s own social media advocates.

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If you had taken part, in person or online, what questions would you have asked Jay Baer?

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Live Streaming – Social Media Author/Blogger Jay Baer

By admin, June 1, 2011

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Wednesday, June 1 @ 4 pm PST

Live from sunny California, AdFarm presents Jay Baer in conversation at the AdFarm Sacramento office.

Author of The Now Revolution, Jay Baer is a social media strategist and consultant who works with leading companies, corporate agency clients, and PR firms.

Join in on the live panel discussion. Jay will be responding to questions from audiences, physical and virtual. Don’t miss out – the live stream is on our Facebook page at:

http://goo.gl/ZOQAb

Ghana Delegation Closes Trip with Launch of Ag Services

By Heather Koehler, June 1, 2011

Concluding the group’s week-long trip to the U.S., the Ghanaian delegation launched a national farm show and an agricultural-focused multi-media platform to gain North American agribusiness support. The National Food and Agriculture Show (FAGRO) and Farm Channel share a common goal – to support the country’s rapidly growing agricultural sector with modern production practices that are low-cost and environmentally sustainable.

To watch and listen to the press conference, go to

http://www.ustream.tv/recorded/14991301

“As we move from subsistence agriculture, we need machinery and technology and know how to use them,” explains Cecilia Erzuah, finance and administration officer of the Ministry of Food and Agriculture in Ghana. “We want to learn lessons from North America’s agriculture success. FAGRO will enable agricultural suppliers to showcase their products, and it lets our markets know what they have. Farm Channel uses media to promote our extension services and provide information to farmers. ”

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FAGRO is a national agricultural trade event that brings together domestic and international companies to present new technologies, trends in agricultural marketing, farm business management and production practices. The 2011 event will be October 7-16 in Accra, Ghana

With a launch to North American businesses, FAGRO organizers hope to heighten international interest in the show and the country’s agricultural potential within the following sectors:

  • Farm machinery and equipment
  • Agricultural inputs
  • Farm and agribusiness services
  • Agricultural commodities and value-added products

Complementing FAGRO’s information-sharing platform, Farm Channel is a multi-media communications initiative that will supply year-round information important to agricultural, food and rural development. Television shows, mobile content, radio programs, internet publications and live events will reach millions of farmers and farm villages while creating an industry network.

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Ghana will be one of the top ten fastest growing economies in the world from 2011-2015. Accounting for approximately 42 percent of the nation’s GDP and 54 percent of its labor force, agriculture is the driving force behind the growing economy. Ghanaian farmers grow a diverse mix of crops including cocoa, cassava, citrus, pineapple, palm oil and mangos.

How to Build Community in Social Media

By admin, April 27, 2011

The single most relevant thing that social media has taught me is how build communities online.

Al Winmill is delivering California almonds from Katie Pinke.

Al Winmill was delivered California almonds from Katie Pinke. This connection was built and created through the agriculture social media community.

Through my work at AdFarm, I have been immersed in social media through AdFarm efforts such as the Know A California Farmer effort by the California Agricultural Communications Coalition. Additionally, I have listened and learned online and offline from AdFarm digital strategists Josh Lysne and Libby Hall. Personally, I have engaged from rural North Dakota in social media to share my family’s farming story that my mom blogs about daily at GriggsDakota. By being engaged digitally, I have built relationships. My online relationships have created opportunities for me join online communities of fellow advocates who want to tell stories of family farmers and connect with non-agriculture audiences to better understand where their food comes from.

This morning, I spoke to a group at North Dakota State University in Fargo on the topic of Engage and Empower Through Social Media. My online communities came to life offline when I hand delivered almonds from the farm of Brent and Brooke Boersma of Ripon, California to Al Winmill in Fargo, North Dakota. Brent and Al are Twitter friends. They are fellow #agnerds, a passionate group of agriculture advocates immersed in technology.  The name #agnerds comes from the hash tag they use on Twitter. Brent and Al have never met offline but have a connection online through the #agnerd community. I have met Brooke, Brent and Al all in person. As I fellow #agnerd, I had the privilege of being the deliverer of the almonds. I transported them two weeks ago from Modesto, California back to my home in rural North Dakota and finally to Fargo this morning to deliver to Al.

Brooke and Brent Boersma, 3rd generation almond farmers in Ripon, California

Brooke and Brent Boersma, 3rd generation almond farmers in Ripon, California

Why do delivering almonds matter in building community in social media?

It’s not about the almonds. It is the relationships, the passion for agriculture, the trust and personal connection that has been built between Brent and Al, all through social media communities. The almonds represent the community they commonly love and share, agriculture.

What are you doing to build communities in social media?

Katie Pinke lives with her husband and three children in the heart of the North Dakota prairie, where she connects people and businesses equally passionate about food, flowers, fuel, fiber and farming to AdFarm. You can find her @katpinke on Twitter or at Katie.Pinke@adfarmonline.com.

CAMA talks about inbound marketing

By Warren Fick, March 22, 2011

The world of online, inbound marketing is not a crazy place. It’s a world of facts, planned options and organized, analyzed data. And at a recent CAMA lunch hosted in our Calgary office, Woodruff Schweitzer’s Sam Hudson was its perfect pitchman.

New ways to pitch and connect

Through his work on the client side of our industry, Hudson became a discerning consumer of great client service. Now, as a Woodruff account manager, Sam supports both ag and non-ag clients with what he learned – which currently includes encouraging them to use online marketing to solve problems. Specifically, he talked to the CAMA audience about attracting traffic, converting traffic, converting leads and analyzing data – the process of online, inbound marketing.

It’s perfectly suited, explains Hudson, to a marketing world where “serving is the new selling” and where marketers and communicators act as “Brand Butlers.”And while it’s true that the mechanics of “Brand Butlership” are new, the theory would have been no surprise to ad pioneers like Leo Burnett who famously stated, “Advertising says to people, ‘Here’s what we’ve got. Here’s what it will do for you. Here’s how to get it.’ “

Woodruff Schweitzer's Sam Hudson

Woodruff Schweitzer's Sam Hudson

Following through and following up, online

In the process of attracting people to a client’s product or service, Hudson spoke at length about the “online lead machine.” The language is a great analogy, with its implications of a great churning, mechanical beast that consumes raw materials at one end and delivers a fine, finished product at the other. Online, he explained, it’s a process divided by landing pages, contagious content and lead management – a process that uses software to score leads, nurture leads and finally to integrate them using the CRM tool of choice.

And how does inbound marketing for business-to-grower (B2G) companies work for his clients? It’s something that has been very functional for a long time, says Hudson. Unfortunately, “…we don’t always see lead generation as a process. We think instead in terms of a seasonal cycle and campaign.” But he has faith that will change, slowly.

At the end of the day, Hudson acknowledges that finding and working with leads is still faithful to the “Kenny Rogers Principle”:

Knowing when to hold ‘em, when to fold ‘em, and when to walk away.

Any lead generation secrets or Kenny Rogers stories you’d like to share?

Warren Fick adores Facebook. His big picture thinking gives our clients a unique face in agribusiness. And he writes. Contact him directly at warren.fick@adfarmonline.com