An emerging way to get people to pay attention to what you're doing in this day and age is to form a flash mob, record the event, and then post it online for the world to see. Sometimes they are just for fun and other times they're to promote events, products, services, etc. Some of the more famous flash mobs are prompted by the guys at Improv Everywhere, but now even organizations like cable TV channel A&E have used it to promote their reality show with MC Hammer.

Just recently, the Circle Players here in Nashville used a flash mob to promote their upcoming performance of Fame. Enjoy!

[HT to Steve for recommending the video this week.]

I've said for a long time that social media really only works when you focus on adding value to other people. The average American is bombarded with 4,000 advertisements every day and we remember almost none of them. That's a lot of time, effort, and money being spent on the wrong people with the wrong message through (probably) the wrong channel.

If you're promoting a product, service, or even your own skills as a candidate for a job, remember that it's really not about you, it's about them. Change the way you engage them with that in mind. This video from Seth Godin last year really reminded me of this whole idea. If you're willing to take it a step further, make it an experience. Ze knows how to make moments that connect with people and all the moments inherently have value for the people he's trying to connect with.

Here's the video of Seth reminding you that no one cares about you:

I remember one summer several years ago when I attended about ten weddings over the course of three months. Everyone wanted to do their own thing to be memorable so I feel like I've seen my share of creative moments in weddings...but this couple beats them all. Hands down.

[HT to Amy Thompson for recommending the video.]

In the most recent episode of The New Mediology podcast, Nathan and I discussed two opposing views of social media. One view looks to social media solely for making money. The other view looks at social media for marketing. The big question then, is this: is social media for business primarily for revenue generation or a necessary (or unnecessary) expense?

The difference in these two perspectives is not whether or not revenue is important. Both would agree that it is. Rather, it's the way in which they use social media to get to the revenue that changes based on the perspective. The "solely for making money" view is only interested in how the tools can be monetized very quickly. This view tends to not have the patience or persistence needed to really begin seeing social media work.

People with the view that social media in business is more for marketing know that they must first understand the rules of engagement, the culture, the techniques, methods, and tools that are out there. They realize that it's just as important to know what you're doing and why you're doing it. They see this investment of time and energy as an expense that will later return in revenue.

Both models of social media exist, but I think it's wiser to take the long view of social media by adopting the mindset that it is going to be an expense first, but the revenue will also come in time. There are two many cases already to prove this. Just as Scot or Jeff.

You can listen to the full discussion on this topic on the podcast. It's available to listen online or in iTunes.

When only a few people have voices, those with the voices are the big guys and everyone else is a little guy. Businesses generally pay more attention to the big guys than the little guys. After all, the big guys have a voice. The little guys don't. The little guy doesn't really matter.

As more people have voices, there are less little guys and more big guys. Businesses then try to differentiate between the biggest big guys and the regular big guys. The little guy still doesn't matter.

When everyone can have a voice because voices are free and accessible, everyone can be a big guy. Businesses now have to decide if they'll pay attention to all current and future big guys or ignore everyone because it's easier. The little guy still won't matter, but it doesn't matter that the little guy doesn't matter, because you don't have to be a little guy.

Today everyone can be a big guy. United Airlines discovered an unhappy big guy recently. They thought they were talking to a little guy, but they didn't realize that everyone can be a big guy now.

And Don't Forget the Little Guys...

Little guys still exist, but not because of discrimination or a system keeping them down. They're still little guys because they've chosen to.

They've chosen to ignore the opportunity to claim their voice.

They've chosen to ignore the opportunity to be heard.

They've chosen to act like there are still big guys and little guys in the old system.

The little guys will continue not to matter either out of choice or ignorance.

If you're in business, you know there are still little guys, but not nearly as many as there used to be. A little guy today can be a big guy tomorrow. What does this mean for how you handle customer complaints, dumb policies, and employees who don't realize there really aren't little guys anymore?

Maybe it's time to to have a discussion about big guys and little guys with your management team and employees. Two weeks ago the term "United breaks guitars" didn't exist. Today there are almost 700,000 references on Google for that exact phrase. Because of social media, there's really no such thing as a little guy anymore.

In my experience, the discussions around "social media metrics" are an opportunity for people who don't want to try social media to provide a seemingly legitimate reason to avoid wading into social media waters. They can play this card because, frankly, there aren't a lot of solid metrics for social media right now. It's the perfect way to act like you're interested but provide a defensible excuse to abstain.

I believe in social media marketing.

I believe it works very well when used correctly.

I believe it's been worth trying without solid metrics, but it's also time to start pushing harder for metrics as well.

I believe social media metrics are necessary and important for some businesses to really begin taking it seriously, and for those already using it to validate why they jumped in.

I hope to begin unraveling the notion that social media is without metrics beginning now.

The LACE Method for Social Media Metrics
I recently launched the LACE method you see below with a client and I'm beginning to implement it with other clients as well. I'm already finding it to be helpful in setting expectations and goals from the outset of a social media initiative. Here are the four parts of the LACE method for measuring social media:

L - Leads: One of my clients has an active sales staff that is now beginning to use Twitter and Facebook. Their own internal lead tracking software is going to reveal over the next several months which leads came through social media. If you don't have leads tracking software yourself, your blog or website analytics will provide a lot of the data you're looking for. For instance, did other blogs, Twitter, accounts, websites, etc. refer people to you? If so, that's in your web analytics. Those were leads for you. Whether or not you did anything with them is up to the quality of your website or blog. You can also ask customers how they heard about you and even provide surveys after a purchase or initial contact. All of this provides lead data that can be traced back to social media.

A - Awareness: Awareness is simple in theory. It's all about the right people knowing you exist. You can measure how many people know you exist by the number of mentions about your company, products, and leaders with various social media monitoring tools like Twitter Search or Technorati for blog monitoring. You might even want to check discussion boards at BoardReader.com. There are other social media monitoring tools available [Shameless plug: my company does this too] but the idea when you start is to determine a baseline of mentions over the last 30 days to 12 months and then build from there. After doing a social media strategy for six months (maybe less) you will be able to quantify whether more people know you exist than when you started.

C - Customer Service: One of the most overlooked opportunities with social media is the chance to meet very real customer service needs. I first started thinking about this last summer and since then we've seen companies like Comcast and Southwest Airlines actively monitor and engage customers in social media by meeting their customer service needs. When you engage a current or potential customer through social media, you're saying a lot about your brand, products, services, and company. This is an easy way to win big with the people who are most likely to talk about you anyway. It's also important to remember that if you don't do customer service well, people will use social media to fire back at you. Just ask United Airlines. They broke a guy's guitar and he took to YouTube, and then it just grew from there. Now there's a catchy little tune called "United Breaks Guitars." Seriously, it's catchy. Kind of like a jingle...but in reverse.

E - Engagement: Engagement is all about conversation. In the same way you can measure awareness, conversation can be measured. Engagement is the active side of the monitoring work. Whereas awareness doesn't require you to actually talk to anyone, engagement only works when you do. One of the two currencies of social media is conversation, so don't take this lightly. In the same way that you can begin with an awareness baseline when you get started in social media, you can determine your engagement baseline. If in six months of starting your social media work you're not having more conversations with people, you're not doing something right.

Undoubtedly there will be more on this as I continue to refine the LACE method of measurement. If you decide to try it out, please let me know in the comments, via Twitter, or by email. I'd love any feedback that will help move this entire discussion forward.

Having two children who have been known to fall asleep in funny places a few times, I couldn't help but include this kid falling asleep in his toy jeep to this week's video of the week. Enjoy.

webstrat-picA few weeks ago I came across a social media presentation online that included a slide with the image you see here. I don't know how the presenter described the slide, but he appeared to be laying a foundation for social media's relationship with a company's web strategy and Internet marketing strategies.

The image struck me right away because, in a single image, I realized there is a whole other category for social media's relationship in the world of marketing from the one I personally hold. Here's what bothered me right away with this particular image:

  • It implies that social media isn't a marketing strategy.
  • It implies that social media is one of three coequal online strategies.
  • It implies that these three things coexist nicely.
  • It implies that they are all necessary.
  • It implies that these three things are separate and distinct.

If I had to redraw this image is would simply have a maroon circle that says "social media marketing strategy" and leave it at that. That's how I see it. Your web strategy has to be more social now. Not because you even choose to, but because that's what it means to be online.

Why Web Strategy Is Unnecessary
I don't personally hold a separate category for "web strategy" apart from "social media strategy." It's all the same thing in my book because social media just means you're online in the current (and highly evolving) online climate. "Web strategy" existed when there were webmasters in organizations. They were the only people who could make things magically appear on the World Wide Web.

That's not the way it is today though. Everyone in your company can publish online and everyone in your company is a marketer. This is happening every day whether you intend for it to or not. They are already creating your web strategy even if you didn't plan for it. The degree to which you formalize your social media strategy and leverage the marketing opportunities is up to you.

When you say web strategy, you're talking about how you want to be online. When you say social media strategy, you're talking about how people already are online. Only when the two are the same will you see it start to work.

My Bias Toward Internet Marketing
I have to confess right off the bat that I feel like the term "Internet marketing" has been hijacked to mean affiliate marketing, online multi-level marketing, and things of that sort. Internet marketing is probably one of the better terms that could be used to describe social media marketing. It's broad enough to not get tied into a single kind of tool or technology. Unfortunately nobody uses the phrase to mean that so we have to say "social media strategy" to make it distinct and assure people that we're talking "new web" rather than "old web."

Internet marketing as most people know it has very little application to real business. The people who seem to do well appear to succeed by convincing others that they're Internet marketing experts and hold the secrets to success that just happen to be in their latest ebook available for $19.95. I put "Internet marketing" in an mental folder marked "Other" and just leave it there. It doesn't even enter into the conversation about marketing online for business.

8 Reasons Why Social Media Is The Best Marketing Strategy Online
Social media is probably the best marketing opportunity you've ever had. Here's why:

  1. You can access all the tools you need for nearly free.
  2. You can find the right people you want to reach more easily than ever.
  3. You can know exactly what your customers are saying about you without wondering anymore.
  4. You can earn people's attention by creating content they find valuable.
  5. You can connect with people directly even when they don't contact your customer service department.
  6. You can engage and empower your biggest fans.
  7. You can influence your greatest detractors (or at least the people listening to them.)
  8. You can generate leads, close sales, network with more knowledge, spy on your competitors, be your own media outlet, and manage your company's reputation.

Internet marketing strategies don't do this. Web strategies (in the old sense) don't do this. Social media marketing strategy does this. It's your web strategy and your marketing strategy. It might change your business strategy. It probably should become your customer service strategy and your PR strategy. Social media isn't just tools and technology. It's the way to be online today because it's the way people are online today.

A week ago Nathan sent me a link to this video by the Japanese band, Sour, and basically said, "This is going to be a video of the week for you." It wasn't like he was asking. He just knew it was good...and I agree wholeheartedly.

The sheer collaboration and coordination effort that went into making this video is pretty incredible. One of the coolest parts about it was that the band tapped into their own fan base to pull this off. I think you'll agree this is one of the more creative videos out there.

If you have ever participated in the development of a new website, one of the most debated issues is the design of the front page. I have observed bitter disagreements among peers about what should or should not appear on the front page of a website. The front page gets a ton of attention in the development of a new site because of the assumption that it is the only place where you can show a visitor all the paths available to them. The problem is, this thinking isn't necessary anymore.

Which would you rather have, one front page to your website or 200? Would you rather have one place for people to go to learn more about you or dozens (or thousands)?

In the new web order, the front page is increasingly unnecessary. It's not dead. It's just not as important as it used to be. Here's why: search results are driving people inside websites. Every page within your site could (and should) be a highly specific front door to the site.

Why I Love Blogs
This is one reason I love blogs as a web presence. Every single blog post is a hook in search engine waters that stands alone. For instance, when someone searches for the phrase "social media Nashville," a series of blog posts from my blog are the second most popular result.  Or take a post I wrote about how to use icons in Twitter. A search on the phrase "Twitter characters" has this post as the second result.

All of this is just a sample of front doors to my site via search. This doesn't include other blogs and websites that link to specific posts. Each one of those references from other sites creates even more front doors...front doors I didn't create, but that were created for me.

The bottom line is that every post creates a new front door to the site that didn't exist before. If you needed any other reason to start a blog, this is it.

I have been blogging for just over three years and have over 550 blog posts. That's 550 different ways for people to find out about me. That's over 550 front doors to MicroExplosion.com. That's where I want my time and energy spent. Not fussing about one big front door, but creating hundreds and hundreds of smaller front doors for the kind of people I hope to reach anyway.

This is a bit off topic from my usual posts, but it seems to hit on business (and life) more broadly so here it goes: your personal life matters. It matters more than whatever you do in business. Some of the recent celebrity deaths got me thinking about this.

Just Saturday former NFL quarterback, Steve McNair, was killed here in Nashville. The details are still coming out, but the reports indicate he was with his girlfriend when he was shot, and she's dead too. McNair was married with four children.

McNair was an absolute stud on the football field. He's revered as one of the guys who played through pain and injury for the team. He was the kind of guy you wanted on your team. He was well regarded in the community too. People liked him on the field and off the field. He was great at all of his business, but in the end, his personal life led to his death.

Michael Jackson died a week ago. We don't know everything that happened on Jackson's final day, but it seems he had medical professionals around him who would provide him with powerful sedatives when he requested it and that appears to have been the cause of death. Jackson was known to have an addiction to pain killers in the past.

Jackson was an absolute wonder for music, videos, and live performances. He holds music industry records that may never be broken and is widely credited as being a major influence on many artists, musicians, and performers today. He was great at his business, but in the end, his personal life led to his death.

It's easy to find people saying great things about McNair and Jackson's professional lives. We're not, however, hearing too many people talking so positively about their personal lives, and I can't help but want to use this opportunity to evaluate my own personal life. Maybe you should as well. After all, we could be great at whatever we do professionally, but our personal life might not be so personal someday. Even worse, it could cut our lives shorter than they should be.

I'm convinced my personal life matters much more than business because, in the end, it's more important than anything I may do professionally. I just don't want to waste my life.

This week's video isn't going to be for everyone. In the Web Site Story, you're either going to get the social media jokes or you won't. If you do, you'll enjoy this. If not, I'll be sure to make next week's video more applicable to everyone.

In January I wrote about how social media marketing works best when you have both the correct marketing mindset and the right online tools to accomplish the strategy.

With all of this in mind, watch the video below. It wasn't intended to be a parable about social media in business, but I think it works really well.

The new tools and technology are red.

The new marketing mindset is blue.

Change is purple.

Ironically, this is a great endorsement for Seth Godin's book Purple Cow.


Blip from Sean Mullen on Vimeo.

Subscribe via Email

Instant Download

Bootcamp Purchase
Add to Cart

The Social Media Boot Camp is a digital resource to help you think strategically about social media and create your own social media marketing plan. You get 3 hours of audio, visuals, and worksheets.

Blog Roll

Categories

, 15 Megs of fame 2010 email stats 3 3D 7 deadly sins of Twitter adults texting stats Alison Groves american idol reaction anatomy of viral video Android app use angel summoner and bmx bandit Angry Birds stats Ann Handley Anthology Creative Apple AT-AT video Atkinson PR Atkinson PR Nashville authentic in social media average Facebook fans average Facebook user average Tweets per day Baby We Were Young bach jesu joy of man's desiring back to the future a capella back to work tips backwards buzzer beater shot bad blog titles bait and switch banner ads Barcamp Nashville batman dog batman meets riddler bed intruder song Best days to send email Bible sniffer Bing Bing stats Biola University black friday shopping prank blackberry problem video blog blog ideas blogging blogging dead blogs Bob Ross bobcats jumbotron dancer BombBomb.com boot camp branding Burson-Marsteller business business blogging cable TV verses Internet Cafe Rakka case study casino couple dances catches categories of web 2.0 celebrity CentreSource Mixer Chilis Foursquare Chris Brogan chrome versus facebook Clean the fan song CNA Building Commentary Conor McCluskey content content as bait content ideas Content is the new promotion strategy content marketing content spectrum content strategy conversation balance score conversation strategy convince CEO for social media coupon stats crash videos crazy hail storm creative marriage proposal dancing with an ipod in public darth vader revealed Darth Vader trombone Dave Beronja Del.icio.us digg digital marketing digital marketing nashville Digital Nashville digital ROI Diners Drive-ins and Dives disconnecting from social media dog puppeteer domino's pizza stats Don Cherry Piano Desk don't be the best don't trust LinkedIn recommendations Don't use Facebook Don't use Foursquare double rainbow Double rainbow guy dowload f8 for marketers drop Twitter duck ride breaks ebook sales projections ebook stats email email stats embrace life psa employee celebrity Engage entrepreneur entrepreneurship Epic Gun Battle video Essure Essure video every business poops f8 for marketers pdf facebook facebook active users Facebook ads Facebook advertising stats Facebook app iPad Facebook Bandpages Facebook changes facebook changes for marketers Facebook comments Facebook decline Facebook engagement Facebook engagement tips Facebook Fan Page Facebook for Dummies facebook for nonprofits Facebook in real life Facebook infographic Facebook insurance Facebook Issuu facebook likes Facebook likes lead to sales Facebook likes stats Facebook mobile Facebook Nashville flood Facebook revenue Facebook search Facebook size change Facebook stats facebook stats 2011 Facebook video fail videos faking social media Farmville faux-thentic FeedBurner Fidelity Offset Printing finger paint artist finger painting Firefly Logic Geek Social Firefox fish Flickr Flip Video Fluxe Digital Marketing football fail for Forget the big fish Fortune 100 Foursquare foursquare active users foursquare stats Foxtrot double rainbow FreeConferenceCall.com friends of fans stats frog plays touch screen game funny car commercial funny ice cream server funny used car commercial future of mobile future of search future of social media Gap Foursquare Gavin Richardson Geek Breakfast Nashville get boss on board with social media get facebook likes Giga Pudding Gmail Gmail undo send gobbledygook good blog titles good morning america phil davison good qr code use Google Google Adwords Google alerts Google Analytics Google April Fools Day Google autocompleter Google calendar Google Chrome use Google docs Google hoaxes Google Keyword Tool Google maps Google Places google plus Google Plus growth google plus stats Google reader Google real-time search Google+ growth Gowalla Grand Rapids Lipdub Groundswell Groundswell ladder Groundswell updated Guest post guy on a buffalo hand model HDTV stats history of social media Hollerado home video commentary homeless guy golden voice How long links live how to disconnect from social media Hubspot Hulu Human 8-bit video human bicycle iGoogle Improv Everywhere Improv everywhere wedding improv toronto Indian pole acrobat Internet stats interviews iPad iPad Facebook iPad social media iPad stats iPad traffic stats iPad Twitter iPad Twitter app iPad use stats iPad Wired app iPhone iphone 4s stats iPod iPod Nano iStrategy conference Jason Elkins Jimmy Kimmel Live jobs from social networking Joe Penna Joel Widemer Joel Widmer john cade jumbotron dance Just for laughs gags Kate and Audrey explain social media kid catches first fish kids destroy home with flour kids explain social media Knoxville social media Knoxville social media training Korea' Got Talent language of smart Laura Click learning social media legacy centre for family business Life of links LinkedIn LinkedIn recommendations local news stats local search stats location based social networking location-based service stats Mafia Wars mariachi band serenades whale Mark Vidler marketing Marketing Over Coffee marketing pasteurization Marketing Profs Math teacher video Matthew Weathers meatball sundae media micro conference Micro Persuasion Microsoft Explorer mini motorcycle tooth pull mitch joel mobile ad click through rate mobile ad click thru rate mobile ad ctr Mobile coupons mobile email stats mobile marketing stats mobile mom stats mobile phone proximity Mobile search mobile stats mobile traffic stats mobile video stats mom facebook stats mom mobile stats momentum for business momentum in marketing moms on Facebook Monday's Stats monitoring monitoring competitors through social media mossy creek custom Mr. Bean in church music industry mysliceofpi MySpace mystery guitar man naked grandma family feud Nashcoctail Nashville Nashville church Nashville flood Nashville flood recovery Nashville flooding Nashville PR Nashville recovery nashville snowstorm traffic Nashville social media conference Nathan Moore Netflix stats New Fangled Web Factory new media new media marketing Nielsen social media report Nikki Klemmer Ning no permission for social media NPR iPad app nutcracker on glass harp OK Go old online advertising online video online video stats Oprah goat yell orabrush youtube Otto Graham Outreach Magazine parkour Paul Schatzin penn olson personal phil davison Picnik Pinnacle Financial Partners pinterest Pinterest growth Pinterest stats Places Plot Device Podcamp Podcamp Nashville podcast podcasting podcasts Poke the box Poke the Box review pole acrobatics pomplamoose positioning super 8 movie POST method Preston Leatherman Price Is Right promoted Tweet cost promoted Tweet stats Promoted Tweets public relations pursue excellence QR Code qr code awareness QR Code Nashville QR code stats qr codes radio advertising rainbow guy ray carman Ray Sadler real-time search recruiters using social media reddit stats remarkable ice cream server Remi Gaillard Reply All commercial reporter hammer car reporter sprayed by sprinkler repurposing content responding to Facebook comments ReTweet picture ReTweeting yourself rhett and link Rhett and Link video Rich K and the Allnighters RISSO Facebook RISSO method for conversation RISSO social networking Robert Scoble RSS Scot Justice scotty american idol mom search engine optimization search terms second life SEO boot camp seo conference Nashville SEO training nashville September 11 tribute Seth Godin Seth Godin shipping ship list short film Simon Sinek smartphone stats Smells Like Rockin' Robin Smells Like Teen Spirit social social logins social media social media and the boss social media art social media batting practice social media boot camp social media boot camp nashville social media budgeting Social Media budgets social media case study social media celebrity Social Media Club Nashville social media deals social media efficiency social media ethics social media events Nashville Social Media Examiner social media for business social media gardening social media haiku social media in business social media in disaster social media is hard social media jobs social media learning social media leftovers social media marketing social media measurement social media meetup Nashville social media mindset social media mobile stats social media monitoring social media Nashville social media Nashville flood social media nativity social media nonprofits social media obstacles social media P.S. social media pasteurization social media permission social media philosophy social media poop social media PR social media problems social media ROI social media science social media scuff marks social media stats social media strategy social media success social media time budget social media training nashville social media unplugged social networking social phone social search soldier returns home soldier surpises family sponsored posts state of the Internet stats Steven Sharp Nelson strategy streaming media stats street ninja improv successful blogging sugar plum fairy glass harp Sung-bong super 8 movie super 8 movie marketing Super Mario Brothers violinist suspension bridge climb tablet purchase decisions tablet sales tablet stats tags team approach to Twitter tech review technology stats Teen Twitter stats teleseminar text message the Bark Side The Dirty Guv'nahs The Domino Project the hand model the Living Camera The Monday Stat List The New Mediology The New Rules of Marketing and PR the office parkour The State of Inbound Marketing tips toddlers and tiaras tom hanks toddlers tiaras Toyota Toyota funny commercial Toyota Sienna commercial Toyota swagger wagon Traditional media transparency Transparent Social Media Transparent Social Media Nashville Travis Robertson turkish ice cream server TV twitter twitter ad stats Twitter balance score Twitter clicks Twitter data Twitter for Dummies Twitter Nashville flood Twitter prediction Twitter Promoted Tweets Twitter real time search Twitter revenue Twitter search Twitter sins Twitter stats Twitter team approach Twitter users 2011 two screens underrated social media tools understanding social media unicorn after wisdom teeth vacation valuable vanilla ice social media Video video blog video conferencing video email Video of the week videos viral video ted williams virtual cfo Volkswagen fast lane VW star wars web 2.0 web 2.0 design web 2.0 marketing web applications web design web stats web trends Weylon Smith what pi sounds like widgets Wii Fit Wii Fit Parody Wikipedia Willis Tower Skydeck women mobile stats word of mouth marketing Wordcamp Nashville Wordpress year Yelp YouTube youtube case study Youtube viewership stats

Archives

  1. February 2012  (3)
  2. January 2012  (9)
  3. December 2011  (9)
  4. November 2011  (11)
  5. October 2011  (14)
  6. September 2011  (12)
  7. August 2011  (12)
  8. July 2011  (10)
  9. June 2011  (13)
  10. May 2011  (11)
  11. April 2011  (12)
  12. March 2011  (10)
  13. February 2011  (11)
  14. January 2011  (11)
  15. December 2010  (9)
  16. November 2010  (10)
  17. October 2010  (14)
  18. September 2010  (10)
  19. August 2010  (12)
  20. July 2010  (11)
  21. June 2010  (13)
  22. May 2010  (13)
  23. April 2010  (14)
  24. March 2010  (12)
  25. February 2010  (14)
  26. January 2010  (13)
  27. December 2009  (8)
  28. November 2009  (12)
  29. October 2009  (12)
  30. September 2009  (12)
  31. August 2009  (14)
  32. July 2009  (13)
  33. June 2009  (12)
  34. May 2009  (11)
  35. April 2009  (13)
  36. March 2009  (13)
  37. February 2009  (11)
  38. January 2009  (13)
  39. December 2008  (10)
  40. November 2008  (13)
  41. October 2008  (16)
  42. September 2008  (13)
  43. August 2008  (14)
  44. July 2008  (16)
  45. June 2008  (14)
  46. May 2008  (13)
  47. April 2008  (19)
  48. March 2008  (20)
  49. February 2008  (19)
  50. January 2008  (19)
  51. December 2007  (13)
  52. November 2007  (17)
  53. October 2007  (17)
  54. September 2007  (13)
  55. August 2007  (13)
  56. July 2007  (11)
  57. June 2007  (11)
  58. May 2007  (12)
  59. April 2007  (13)
  60. March 2007  (16)
  61. February 2007  (14)
  62. January 2007  (22)
  63. December 2006  (14)
  64. November 2006  (18)
  65. October 2006  (18)
  66. September 2006  (18)
  67. August 2006  (19)
  68. July 2006  (16)
  69. June 2006  (19)

© 2010 MicroExplosion Media - All rights reserved

Powered by NetEffect Services