Atlantic Business Technologies, Inc.

Category: Managed Services

  • If Car Dealers Can Tune Up Real Time Shoppers, So Can Your Business

    Social Media Marketing Tipping Point

    How do you know when new marketing is about to become OLD marketing? When laggards like car dealerships start to get on board, it is a clear sign we are well past the social media marketing tipping point (lol). I’ve been fascinated with car dealers in a train wreck, have to watch kind of way. The power of an entire business segment to stick their collective head in the ground and attempt to wish away the future and the NOW has been impressive.

    Dealer Marketing Article

    This article in Dealer Marketing Magazine is a sign of HOPE for car dealers and a shot directly across any social media marketing hold outs. When car dealers understand the need for real time social media marketing, so should you (call me crazy). Internet Marketing Goes Mobile – Join The Revolution post is related as the fuel behind the pressure this article discusses. This article started on Design Revolution on Scoop.it, but has been expanded here to defeat the duplicate content police (lol).

    Note From Article
    How your dealership can handle modern consumers who expect instantaneous response. (Is Your Dealership Ready for the Real-Time Shopper?: Latest Marketing News …)

    Marty Real Time Note
    You know you’ve passed a significant social media marketing tipping point when laggards start climbing in the car. When I bought my last car, I had my Macbook Air live on their wifi, tweeting what was happening as the deal happened, checking Cars.com and other resources and checking everything the guy said in real time, AND I STILL GOT TAKEN.

    This article is 75% about what most reading this post already know – the real time and ditigal revolution is HERE – and only 25% about what to do about it. Here are my tips if, God forbid, I owned or ran a car dealership:

    EMBRACE the social media marketing and the digital revolution, don’t just accept it, by doing this…

    • Put your dealer #hashtag in clear view.
    • Create social contest and games awarding ongoing contribution and participation (stay top of mind even when I’m between cars).
    • Curate your UGC (user generated content), so you aren’t just talking to yourself about yourself all the time (an industry preoccupation).
    • Show and share, share and show – look to learn from and listen to your customers and strip the overblown rhetoric, BS and games.
    • Realize that the real VALUE you create is so much greater than the short term profit on any given deal (hard to convince your greedy sales force they are best served by long term thinking, but they are, and continuing to screw people is over, done, finished).
    • Your most important asset is NOT on the lot but online – your reputation.
    • Reduce your footprint – all those cars on the lot as advertising is stupid, expensive and unnecessary. Look hard at your 80/20 rule and manage to that.
    • Understand social media is NOT just deal flow. You can put deal flow into social NO MORE than 50% of the time. 90% deal flow confirms you don’t get social media marketing.
    • The other 50% of the time, SHARE authority reinforcing content such as reviews, information about innovations and news.
    • Ask for your customers’ social contacts and then segment your customers based on power users, middle and beginning social media marketing status. Soon every customer will use social media, but not all social media users are equal. Car dealers should know who is across the desk from them. If you are selling a car to Seth Godin or Chris Brogan, BE CAREFUL and don’t be a jerk. Good advice even if Marty Smith or Jane Smith is across the desk.
    • Use gamification (Download my free and no obligation Gamification: Winning Hearts Minds and Loyalty Online white paper) and social capital so we can discuss something other than MONEY. Also keeps me interested in you even when I am not buying a car.
    • Don’t be a jerk, since I can make your being a jerk go global in nothing flat, because someone in a position of authority where big money is involved being a jerk is some of the most viral content on earth.

    Car dealerships can change, and those who do will make more money. Those who don’t will be looking for work. As with anything, 20% of the dealers will make 80% of the change and thrive while the rest of the car dealers will look around and wonder what hit them. I can answer that too. What hit you was an empowered public who is tired and not going to take it anymore. Next time you sell me a car, it would be a good idea to know if I can reach out and touch 5K or 10K people as you are speaking to me.

    Marty

    Created New Revolutionary Scoops. Please visit:

    Martin Marty Smith on Scoop.it (home of Curation Revolution where you can discover why Scoop.it ROCKS)

    Social Media Marketing Revolution

    Digital Revolution Leaders

  • Can Social Media Make Your Company Smarter?

    Came from my new Social Media Marketing Revolution Scoop.it Feed.

    You’ve started a fan page for your company on Facebook. You’ve attracted a few followers on Twitter. Seems you’ve got that whole social media thing figured out. Or do you?

    Marty’s Social Media Makes You Smarter Note

    Anything that provides feedback loops creates a learning opportunity, so yes Social CAN make you and your company “smarter”. Social media helps you know about what people think about what you do.

    Since we live in a time when marketing is ABOUT what people think about what we do judged by their willingness to take some action (Retweet, Like, Link or Advocate) social media makes us smarter Internet marketers. More than what YOU think about what you do or did Social Media is about what THEY think about what you did.

    Feedback loops should create an ever more intimate relationship between YOU and THEM and that is how, as Reuters Can Social Media Make Your Company Smarter points out, to use social media marketing to become “smarter”.

    Here are some quick tips to make sure Social Media Marketing makes your company smarter:

    • Set up and watch 3 to 5 Key Performance Indicators such as number of followers, traffic from social and by what post and time on site from social traffic.
    • Test and probe social media with changes to topic, time of day and language. Seek to beat your “control” as much as that is possible where it can be hard to create apples to apples comparisons.
    • Expand your definition of “success” to include gains in important heuristics ont directly able to be traced back to social. In general, if you can’t understand what is causing something it is probably social.
    • Use the medical school approach: watch one, do one and TEACH one to really capture SMARTS from social media marketing.

    When in doubt hire pros to coach and mentor you for six months then ween them down and out by the end of the first year. Hard, but not impossible, for others to curate your social media long term. In order for me to help you Tweet or post to Facebook I, or any consultant, needs to understand your business category almost better than you. In the short run the consultant’s social media marketing knowledge is more important than his or her industry knowledge. In the long run that equation is reversed, so set specific time frames and fire your consultants to part time after six months and altogether after a year (or when your campaigns are complete and you feel you know how to fish).

    Any good social media marketing consultant expects to reach a point of diminishing returns and should suggest moving on to their next project. You pay social media consultants in cash and they learn new tricks and variations. Tricks and variations they will peddle to the next client. I look at any Internet marketing assignment as if my biggest challenge is sharing what I know as fast as possible.

    I and we don’t mind being “fired” when the job is done, when our clients can almost out fish us. Actually, our clients should out fish us IN THEIR BUSINESS. For a little bit and on clear, cool days any consultant can learn enough about carpet cleaning, ERP or high tech weapons to be helpful. Good consultants help your company see things differently too, see things the way the are formed online. Because something is X in the world doesn’t mean it is so online.

    Online is a different ecosystem with different skills and tensions. A lot of my favorite “tricks”, Internet marketing I saw not long after starting in 1999, are now known by the multitudes such as:

    • Content Marketing
    • Email Marketing
    • Social Media Marketing
    • Cause Marketing
    • Mobile Marketing

    Large tribes live in all of those places now so I move on to topics and ideas that are less thick with competition such as:

    • Curation As The Next Web Revolution
    • Process As Product
    • Infinite Inventory
    • Agile Marketing

    Not all of these “What’s Next” posts will pan out. I wrote about Infinite Inventory in 2008 and it hasn’t gained much steam as a meme, as a concept capable of walking around on its own. Lack of pick up usually means the idea isn’t formed in a sticky, easy to transfer way.

    If your are an Internet marketer your job is to find the Next Big Thing moments before it blows up. This kind of task is a journey not a destination and the search is infinite. Even GREAT Internet marketers don’t expect to bat more than .400 (or 4 out of 10 winners). This puts you in the “junk bond” business. Try a bunch of stuff, refine the winners and drop the losers. Remember my Internet Marketing Secret: More and More, Faster and Faster, Better and Better and your social media efforts will make your company smarter, more aligned to your customers and capable of sustainable growth and profits.

    Marty

  • Social Media Marketing – Welcome To The Revolution, You In?

    The Social Plan Is NOT To Plan
    by Jay Deragon on The Relationship Economy

    Great scoop on Curation Revolution by a trusted source on how the best Social Media Plan may be less plan and more do. I agree with stipulations as noted below. This post starts with Jan Gordon’s note on Scoop.it. Jan is smart and she gets it so follow her if you want great links, analysis and ideas about social media marketing, curation, Internet Marketing et al.

    Jan Note
    I selected this piece written by Jay Deragon because his insights and suggesgtions are like a beacon in the chaos of change.  This piece is no exception. To paraphrase:

    Social is changing so rapidly, it’s impossible to create a plan when you have a moving target. The only solution at this point in time is to dive in and learn quickly.

    Here’s what caught my attention:

    **The evolution of the web is accelerating with new tools, new discoveries and the subsequent market dynamics effected by these changes.

    **As more and more conversations begin to impact business models, market relations and the supply and demand equations the more traditional mind sets try and fit these changes into the old box.

    **Most executives are totally disconnected from the dynamics created by all things social.

    **Yet the same executives expect their managers to come up with a plan to use this thing called social media.

    **If you ask someone for a plan that neither you or they understand you’ll get a plan that doesn’t create anything new

    **it only addresses all things social in context to what they know

    **What they know is not what they need to know.

    Takeaways:

    **the plan ought to be more about understanding, learning and adapting to the new marketplace dynamics that are changing your relationships with buyers

    **Guy Kawasaki says: “Don’t plan social media just do it!”

    **Doc Searle wrote The Cluetrain Manifesto

    which Jay refers to in this piece, I highly recommend it, it’s like a roadmap for everything discussed in this article.

    Curated by Jan Gordon covering “Exploring Change Through Ongoing Discussions”

    Feel free to visit my other topic: “Content Curation, Social Business and Beyond”

    Marty’s Social Media Planning Note

    Jan is, as usual, insightful. I agree with the “do” vs. “plan” stance, but with these modifications:

    * Processes can be “planned” even as results must be responded to and acted upon in near real time. You “plan” a process by mapping it and practicing using the map to create real response. Read Dov Seidman’s important book: How: Why How We Do Anything Means Everything for tips.

    * Refine and Prioritize – Since the amount of content you need is infinite and you can’t get there from here (lol), prioritize down to CORE curation and creation topics. I create these lists, and curation is always longer than creation, from several sources including internal knowledge, external gurus (what are they talking about NOW) and keyword research.

    * 3% Weather Rule – Recent Bit.ly research showed a consistent 3% of traffic is always about the weather. Find what is the “weather” topic or trend in your business vertical and rap on that consistently.

    * Start small and local – this is one of my most controversial recommendations because most people want to go right to Broadway. I like to open out of town closest to my friends, so I start with local riffs and build until I have an idea about what matters to whom and why. Once I have a local grasp I go regional looking for dissonance with my original discoveries (there always is some) and finally I go national and step on the gas HARD.

    * Cluetrain is great and an important book, but looking a tad long in the tooth. If you need convincing or need to convince others Cluetrain is an important read (Gonzo Marketing by Locke one of the Cluetrain authors is also excellent). Cluetrain’s message, take your head out of you know where and realize the bomb has exploded now understand what that explosion means, is, sadly, still important for some. Sadly because we are in the 3rd inning now to wait any longer is to miss the game. Think about it, if I compete with you and have a one year jump on social will you EVER catch up? Catching up is possible, but you will need to be 10x as good as the competitor with the jump, early believers pick all the low hanging fruit as ClueTrain points out in a roundabout way.

    Great scoop, summary and thoughts from Jan.

    .M
    See on www.relationship-economy.com

  • Is it Time to Future-Proof Your Business? (POLL)

    “Future Proof” – I”ve been hearing that phrase thrown around quite a bit these days.  As a wanna-be futurist, not all that shocking, but get’s me to wondering what are the rest of you out there thinking?  Is your start-up or existing business ready to take on this new breed of business that’s emerging – or today’s consumer expectations?

    Surely My Business is Safe!

    Whether you sell ice to Eskimos, save the Eskimos habitat or make highly sophisticated training manuals for the Eskimos of the world – there’s no avoiding the fact that building and maintaining a successful business requires use, discipline and mastering of  technology.  Today’s technology.

    A decade, heck even 5 years ago, having a great website to support well managed organizations that prided themselves on excellent customer satisfaction could go pretty far.  That was when sales calls were still “calls” – right?

    Today’s Businesses Face a New Reality

    Today’s technology has advanced to where websites should more aptly be called “Platforms” – where engagement with brands and with each other online is the new normal – even in business.  Where screen size (PC, tablet, mobile) is a huge fat question mark – yet you’d better be ready to have your business play nice with any of them.

    Just  launching your own start-up (Congrats!)?
    Perhaps Mr. Boss appointed you to handle strategy for mobile, social or website overhaul?

    -I’d love to hear where your biggest priorities are as we blaze through the remainder of 2012.
    I will share results of the poll in early August.
    It will also help shape Atlantic BT marketing efforts, supporting our existing and future clients – clients we like to consider our business partners.

    Which category best fits your business needs?

    If you have all these areas covered, please make a comment below so we can connect.
    I’d love to highlight your success and help others.

  • Is Branding An Artifact Of The Past?

    Apple Think Different Branding Aritcle on Atlantic BT link

    Quite a controversy blew in on Curation Revolution on Scoop.it last week. I didn’t start this controversy (lol). The “branding as a possible waste of time” controversy was started by Brian Millar, the strategy director at Sense Worldwide on Fast Company. Brian’s two part series took cherished brands and what passes as “branding” to task.

    I decided to reverse my reading order here and lead with Brian’s first article titled: Branding Talk Isn’t Helping Your Company Here Is What Should Replace, followed by my reactions to Is Branding An Artifact of the Past. Since Brian’s second title feels like the real question, so I used it in question form to umbrella both Brian’s posts and my notes. I added What To Do About Branding, today.

     

    Marty’s Notes On Branding Is An Artifact of the Past

    I appreciate a genius marketer helping me rethink cherished assumptions. Brian is onto something too. Brands, like everything else, are changing. When consumers are willing to showroom a product in Target and buy it from Amazon whose brand is winning? Is the concept of brand misaligned as Millar suggests?

    Millar is making an important point. Brands in an interconnected, conversationally rich, always on world where you can know and participate in anything and where time and space collapse are different. Our post-Moore’s Law and “Internet Everything” time is different. When I was growing up there were four TV channels and shows such as Beaver Cleaver was considered exciting television. Try watching a single episode of Leave It To Beaver now to know how painful time’s whip can be (lol).

    I think Millar has stumbled onto a larger marketing myth, a myth that may have pulled wool over marketers’ eyes for a hundred years. Brands seemed like our organizing force then because there were so few organizing forces. Now that we have forces forming, exerting influence and disbanding in moments, at least compared to Beaver Cleaver’s time, brands may not be the STRONG FORCE we have perceived them to be.

    My showrooming example is telling. If I’m on a phone in Target buying an ipad for 30% less from Amazon is my brand loyalty to Apple, Amazon or Target? Neither since the “brand” loyalty is to saving 30%. If brands don’t rubber band or wrap consumer behavior as once thought what does? I’ve been fascinated with natural emergent systems such as ants and bees. Perhaps branding has been wrongly credited for genetic dances we all do, like bees, to describe where the food is hiding. We marketers, observing the dance, assigned credit to the last touch (the brand and branding) when attribution is more tribal, primordial and way upstream.

    Let’s return to the Beav for a moment. Beaver Cleaver was a brand. He had goofy clothes some poor kid’s mom purchased, a goofy looking beanie hat and a lunch box that is probably a collectible now. Beaver was a “brand” in the sense that his image communicated complex messages fed by a weekly TV show when there wasn’t much competition. Beaver’s real branding was around classic American values. Beaver’s life had everything and everyone in their place. Beaver and his friends were well supported by money, friends and family. This dream-like world where no one gets sick or dies was always time stamped losing relevance almost as the show aired.

    The Beaver didn’t last because his product didn’t have the legs or deep quality and excellence needed to continue to pivot, to create an ever widening, transparent and contemporary relevance. One day there were Beaver beanies and the next there wasn’t. After reading Millar’s articles one day there was a Coke and another day there may be no coke. Coke’s legs are looking short in the relevance department as Millar points out. I can hear the running of the bulls, angry bulls released by making such a statement. Let ’em run.

    I appreciate Brian’s breaking my cherished brand glasses since these new broken glasses seem more capable of seeing into what is happening NOW. There are a lot of things happening all at once and I’m starting to move over to Millar’s thinkng that much of the process, promotional and product excellence we’ve labeled “branding” may be more related to real execution and less mythical things such as “branding”.

    Great Einstein-like thought experiment in any case.

    Marty &  Therese Torris Notes

    Branding Is An Artifact of the Past

    Branding as shorthand feels more important now as the world collapses on our heads, but there is something gone forever in time. Perhaps brands haven’t changed as much as we have. This reminds me of returning to Harry C. Withers Elementary School after years away. What was once so large on return was so small. This shrinkage is what has happened to brands. Brands stayed the same size, but we’ve gotten infinitely larger. Smart, well thought out article with a position I never considered but that makes sense of our NOW.
    Marty

    Great comment from Therese Torris accurately summarizes my thinking before reading this article. After reading it I’m not as sure:

    Therese Torris (Today, 5:55 AM):
    I think brands are huge but they’re so many and so pervasive that we don’t perceive them any more. We swim in brands like fish in the ocean, we “Google”, we “send from my iPad”, we wear logos on our forehead… but thanks for the food for thoughts…

    What To Do About Branding?

    Google’s latest Panda and Penguin algorithm updates contain an important idea for branding and those who brand (us). Google’s strong stance is you create quality content and Google’s algorithm will work out who should win. It is easy to understand why Google is taking this stance. The explosion of UGC (user generated content) thanks to social networks changes what it means to be a “search engine”.

    Brian’s articles could also have been titled Search Engines An Artifact of the Past.  Search engines are over, done, gone. You may still use Google to search, millions do as I type this, but the concept of an all knowing God-like “engine”  has been blown to tiny bits never to be reassembled. Once Google’s results started to float, when you see different results on the same keyword as me, then the concept of “search engine” was gone. Search engine implies static, absolute result sets. Static, everyone sees the same thing, results sets are gone (so important it warranted a repeat).

    Rise of Social/Search and Branding

    Here is where we enter tricky chicken or egg territory. Did the site I managed as a Director of Ecommerce receive more branded searches than anything because brands are what people look for or because our collective marketing system creates branded searches? A little bit of both ideas are in play.

    Our commercial lives have been formed by “brands” and “branding”. If you are a baby boomer you’ve been exposed to millions of commercial messages many of them attached to shows such as Beaver Cleaver. Your (other boomers reading this) brand preferences are formed. What about if I had a son or daughter who would almost be about ready to have a family? What brands would my grandchildren imprint on and why, or how?

    If I had the answer to such questions I could sit on a beach and have frosty beverages with little umbrellas brought to me at regular intervals. No one can know or predict who will win today’s and tomorrow’s brand battles. There are things we know including:

    • “Traditional media” such as print and TV will have less brand imprint power.
    • The ubiquitous mobile web will play a major role in forming “brand share”.
    • Social/Search and its sister Social/Shopping are sure to play a major role too.

    Given these known future realities marketing will be different. Here are tips on how to form a future “brand” or reposition ones you have:

    • Discard cherished beliefs as Black Swan useless (read Taleb’s recently updated book for more).
    • Check in on and revise company values (if needed).
    • Create a “Blue Ocean” analysis of your business vertical (read Blue Ocean Strategy for more).
    • Skeptical about Blue Oceans? Create detailed SWOTS (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats) for you AND your 3 largest and most effective competitors.
    • Create the single most important thing you want to accomplish in the next 90 days (read Mastering The Rockefeller Habits for more).
    • Create Social, Local and Mobile SoLoMo campaigns radiating out from your location.
    • Whatever you are spending on PPC double it.
    • Whatever you are spending on inbound content marketing triple it.

    Why SoLoMo?

    The most controversial of my “branding” recommendations will be starting local. B2B brands will want to go national NOW. I don’t suggest starting small and local lightly and I suggest it for all companies who want to form “brands” built for the future.

    Did you notice the lack of traditional “branding” campaigns in the list above? I fall in with Millar in the belief that branding is a byproduct of other marketing activities done with grace and greatness. Start small and local because doing so is thinking like an Internet marketer:

    • Build a testing culture always looking to beat “control” creative.
    • Create influential Key Performance Indicators (KPIs).
    • Respond to what is happening in near real time via social networks.
    • Build ever more powerful positive virtual cycles where KPIs increase exponentially.

    Building ever more powerful positive virtual cycles is another way of saying more and more, faster and faster, better and better (read Internet Marketing’s Secret: More and More, Faster and Faster, Better and Better on ScentTrial Marketing for more on this key concept). You build brands for your children’s generation by being present, honest and values driven (read Grow by Stengel or Built to Last by Collins for more on importance of values).

    In the end, the brands your children buy will be formed by actions (read How: Why How We Do Anything Means Everything by Dov Seidman for more on the importance of actions and processes consistent with values).

    Hire An Internet Marketer, Ask For A “Brand” Audit

    I’m an internet marketer and love this stuff, so you may think I am about to shill reasons for hiring Atlantic BT. A company consistently growing its top and bottom line greater than 25% before I arrived doesn’t need pushing. Atlantic BT is already a rocket ship well into an advanced growth phase. The “do we have a fit or a partnership” is a separate conversation best had in person and with people like Mike McTaggart and his business consulting team so I won’t discuss partnership here. This is not to say I don’t believe you and your company wouldn’t be better off with help from a group like ours or US. In fact, the most critical “branding” action you can take is hire someone like us, an agency who understands how to create future brands via Internet marketing’s 4Cs: Content, Community, Campaigns and Conversion.

    Your story must be told online. More than that, your story must be told online consistent with your company’s values and its past (what many still think of as “branding”). These new Internet marketing tools such as Google Analytics, Magento and Social Media Marketing (Facebook and Twitter among others) are different and have two simultaneous audiences: People and Social/Search (Google).

    You must hire a solid Internet marketing team to support until your team learns how to fish for themselves. The tricky part, as if the rest of this wasn’t tricky enough, is you can’t make your hiring decision based on what a vendor like Atlantic BT knows. The truth of Internet marketing I exposed in More and More, Faster and Faster and Better and Better is no one knows nothing (lol).

    It is impossible to “know” what to do. What is happening NOW is Internet marketing’s only truth and NOW reinvents itself every second. Strange as it sounds, you must hire a partner based on their confessed ignorance. Look for processes not conclusions. If a firm tells you they can do anything Internet marketing related for X price and in Y time they are liars or worse fools and you should run for the door. Don’t confuse “impact” with process. Any competent company can share how much and how long it will take to develop a website. What no company can guarantee is will your new site matter. Testing and time are the only ways to know when or if something matters online and for who, and, to some degree, why. Everything else is Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics (lol).

    Your best partner to create future brands believes in two things: Your Company Values and Wisdom of Crowds. All other “beliefs” are formed from the bedrock of these two ideas. This is not to discount the value of experience. Experience does lower creation costs and increase chances for a better result, but Black Swan’s exist and anyone who asserts their ability to, beyond any doubt, do anything is making it up. Better to judge a potential partner’s soul than their past accomplishments since a company’s soul is long lived and immutable (for the most part). When your soul feels like a match to theirs HIRE THEM.

    To repeat a critical idea if a potential Internet marketing partner promises anything that seems too good to be true it is. “Too good to be true” tactics can do more than short term damage, they can harm your most valued possession – your online reputation. Google has an elephant’s memory, so go slow, discard cherished assumptions and hire your soul mates and create “brands” that will matter long into the future. Do that and whether we call it “branding” or “Internet marketing” is moot.

     

    Follow and Get To Know Atlantic BT

    The best first step in finding and hiring your Internet marketing soul mate is to follow them. Here are ways you can follow Atlantic BT:

    @Atlantic BT on Twitter

    Our Contact Us page

    Join the over 1,300 who have Liked and Shared our Facebook Page

    If you are ready to get started with a no obligation review of your needs, email Mike (Mike.McTaggart(at)Atlanticbt)dot(com).

  • Kind of BLUE: Why Blue Rocks Website Designs

    Screenshot of designmodo.com

    We all dream in color. Every design concept and sketch comes with some sort of color association. But what do those colors mean? What associations are we making just with that choice alone?

    Marty Note
    When you want to win online you understand the crowd and surf their wave. This is not to say you “sell out” or leave your beliefs or values in the dirt. It is to say smart Internet marketers watch their feedback loops like hawks and modify their brilliant plans with feedback from the mob and wisdom of crowds. Here is a USA Today poll showing favorite colors:

    Blue: 44%
    Green: 12%
    Red: 11%
    Black: 4%
    Purple/Violet: 4%
    Brown: 3%
    Pink/rose: 3%
    Beige/Tan: 2%
    White: 2%
    Grey: 2%
    Yellow: 2%
    Mauve: 2%
    Fushia: 2%
    Maroon: 2%

    Let’s see we can use yellows and thrill NO ONE or find new ways to be blue. You know where I’m going (lol).
    Marty
    See on designmodo.com