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.
