Posts Tagged: socialnetworking


17
Aug 09

Link roundup: read & recommended between August 5th and August 17th

Added to my Delicious bookmarks between August 5th through August 17th:

  • Facebook's Click-Through Rates Flourish … for Wall Posts – Advertising Age – DigitalNext – Sure, click-through rates for general display ads on Facebook have been criticized for being rather unimpressive, but click-through rates for content on brand pages' walls are as high as 6.49%, according to estimates from Vitrue, a startup that helps marketers manage their social-media presences.
  • 40 Superb Psychology Blogs | PsyBlog – Forty of the best psychology blogs, chosen to give you a broad sweep of the most interesting content being produced online right now.

    The list is split into three sections: first are more general psychological blogs, followed by those with an academic slant, followed by condition specific and patient perspective blogs. Other than that the blogs are presented in no particular order.

  • Celeb Product Hawkers Fail to Sway Consumers – When respondents in the survey were asked whether the presence of a celebrity in an ad makes them more likely, less likely or neither more or less likely to buy the product, nearly 8 in 10 (78%) said it doesn’t sway them one way or the other. In fact, only 8% said the presence of a celebrity spokesperson makes them more likely to buy a product. This compares with a significant 12% who actually say it makes them less likely to buy a product.
  • Understanding How a Facebook Page Grows: New Research | Community Organizer 2.0 – Facebook Page growth is “not usually the result of a single chain-reaction event,” but rather the confluence of a large number of users. After looking at every Facebook Page with over 1,00 fans (as of August 2008), the report concludes:
    Pages accrue fans as a result of many different clusters of connected people becoming fans.
    The single most important action that creates these clusters is when a user becomes a Fan and broadcasts this action to their friends’ news feeds.
  • Why Teens Don’t Tweet | Mashable – Twitter’s different than Facebook or MySpace because Twitter is not about your friends. As I highlighted in my analysis of Twitter’s new homepage, Twitter is quickly becoming the epicenter of world events. Yes, you can update your status, but you can do that just as easily on Facebook. What you can’t do on other social media sites is learn about the #IranElection crisis in real-time.

4
Aug 09

Link roundup: read & recommended between July 31st and August 4th

Added to my Delicious bookmarks between July 31st through August 4th:

  • YouTube Goes After Local News, Attempts to Sign Newspaper, TV Partners – MarketingVOX – ouTube has created a new feature called “News Near You” which uses the internet address of the visitor’s computer to determine the user’s location, and offers relevant local videos from within a 100-mile radius.The feature is just one element in YouTube’s push into news video.
  • Study: Women Value SocNets but Won't Pay Fees – MarketingVOX – The top five reasons women belong to social networks:

    To network professionally
    To stay up-to-date with friends
    To stay up-to-date with groups they belong to
    To promote their business.
    To research products or services

  • Trends Shaping the New Consumer » Ipsos-Ideas.com – The New Consumer has re-evaluated individual and societal roles and has decided to 'reboot' and start over. No longer content to leave it to institutions to repair what they see as the system's shortcomings or failures, they are leading the way and taking charge. They are taking this opportunity to do away with artificial and manufactured needs, rediscover the true value of things and live new experiences. They are conspicuously green, consuming in different ways – looking for tangible ways to indulge on a dime instead of a dollar, to share and swap as opposed to buy, to reuse and exchange instead of dispose – and are not shy about letting people know they are doing it. They choose to do their business with suppliers who authentically share their values of social and environmental responsibility, and they understand that the internet has empowered them with an unprecedented voice, reach and participation in product or service development.
  • Stop Saying Sorry, Start Getting Really Social – "It's a mistake to think that simply responding to negative customer experiences with a speedy Tweet, or jolly little video, is enough. But unless you’re prepared to perform root and branch surgery on the way that your company works, and put the customer at the heart of everything that you do, it won’t make a difference as you’ll always be fighting fires"
  • MarketingSherpa: Using LinkedIn for Lead Generation: 6 Lessons – LinkedIn requires a special approach to lead generation, and presents some unique challenges for marketers.
  • Mobile Data Users Connecting To Ads In Other Media | MediaPost – while people are not averse to advertising on mobile devices, they object to the lack of relevant ads. Working with comScore on its latest round of mobile research, Starcom found 63% of mobile data subscribers are using mobile phones as a way to access ads or offers in other media.

11
Jul 09

Link roundup: read & recommended between July 8th and July 10th

Added to my Delicious bookmarks between July 8th through July 10th:

  • Tourism BC | Research – B.C. travel & tourism research
  • Global Advertising: Consumers Trust Real Friends and Virtual Strangers the Most | Nielsen Wire – Recommendations from personal acquaintances or opinions posted by consumers online are the most trusted forms of advertising, according to the latest Nielsen Global Online Consumer Survey of over 25,000 Internet consumers from 50 countries.
  • Social Media: Anderson Analytics Reveals Users' Habits – Advertising Age – Digital – "Which social network you favor says a lot about you — and you might be surprised just what it says."
  • 39% of Moms Make 'Net Time Their Quiet Time – MarketingVOX – New behavioural research on digital habits of moms. "The number of moms who use social media regularly (e.g. Facebook, MySpace, BabyCenter Community) has significantly increased from 11% to 63% since 2006; a change of 462%."
  • Kids Flocking to the Web | Nielsen Online – "According to Nielsen, kids 2-11 spent nearly seven hours online per month five years ago, versus 11 hours a month in 2009, with boys spending slightly more time on average than girls (seven percent more this past May). That usage disparity is perhaps most evident in online video viewing, as boys accounted for 61 percent of video streams among kids on the Web and 57 percent of kids time spent viewing videos."
  • 5 outstanding corporate blogs | iMedia Connection – "Corporate blogging is a great marketing tool — but not one that should be launched lightly. Like other marketing initiatives, a company's blog is an investment that should produce a measurable return. Thus much thought should be given to ways in which companies can enhance the value of these programs for both their consumers and their own bottom lines."

2
Jul 09

Link roundup: read & recommended between June 30th and July 2nd

Added to my Delicious bookmarks between June 30th through July 2nd:

  • Half of Twitter Registrants Have Never Tweeted – Despite significant growth in the number of Twitter accounts since last year, 53% of those who have registered with the much-publicized micro-blogging service have no followers, 56% are not following anyone, and 55% have never even tweeted, according to a report from HubSpot.
  • Facebook Connect Is A Huge Success — By The Numbers – Registration: sites that use Facebook Connect as an alternate to account registration have seen a 30-200% increase in registration on their sites.
    Engagement: sites with Facebook Connect see a 15-100% increase in reviews and other user generated content
    Traffic: For each story published in Facebook, we see roughly 3 clicks back to the site. Nearly half the stories in the Stream get clicked on. This creates opportunities for the site to encourage more user actions – knowing that each one may result in 3 new visits to their site. With other models like search, there’s nothing you can do to increase user traffic besides optimizing for keywords.
  • Strategic Blogging and Some Tactics to Nail It | chrisbrogan.com – Once you get past the “should my company be blogging” hurdle and into the “okay, so now what?” part of the race, the next question you might find yourself facing is, “What should I be doing to marry my blogging to my business goals?”
  • The sour Wikipedian | Rough Type: Nicholas Carr's Blog – Forget altruism. Misanthropy and egotism are the fuel of online social production. That's the conclusion suggested by a new study of the character traits of the contributors to Wikipedia. A team of Israeli research psychologists gave personality tests to 69 Wikipedians and 70 non-Wikipedians. They discovered that, as New Scientist puts it, Wikipedians are generally "grumpy," "disagreeable," and "closed to new ideas."
  • YouTube CTA Overlay Lets You Drive Users Elsewhere – MarketingVOX – Today YouTube releases the Call-to-Action Overlay, a semi-transparent pop-up that enables advertisers to link viewers to any site they wish. For example, a company supporting a charity can send users watching a certain video to their charity subsite.

16
Jun 09

Bookmarks for June 16th from 17:27 to 17:27

Bookmarked on June 16th


10
Jun 09

Bookmarks for June 10th from 20:28 to 20:37

Bookmarked on June 10th

  • Local Mobile Content Audience Grows 51% – The number of consumers who seek local information on a mobile device grew 51% from March 2008 to March 2009, according to data from comScore Mobile, which also found that mobile subscribers are increasingly using downloaded applications and SMS to access local content.
  • Gays & Lesbians More Likely to Read Blogs, Tweet, Use SocNets – More than half (55%) of gay and lesbian respondents in a recent survey by Harris Interactive report that they read some type of blog – compared with only 38% of heterosexuals – and also are more likely to use popular social networking sites and microblogging tool Twitter
  • 95% of Teen Shoppers Notice Mall Ads – Nearly all (95%) teen shoppers (ages 12-17) in the US who have visited a mall in the past 30 days say they notice some type of mall advertising, according to (pdf) recent research from Arbitron and Scarborough Research. These teens also spend significant amounts of time and money in the mall and are feeling the pinch of the current economic crisis.