Posts tagged ‘people’

Facebook is updating its Privacy Policy. They did it the Facebook way, which is great PR. The company looks like it is taking care of business because it can say things like on their blog like On Nov. 5, we wrapped up a week-long notice and comment period for a proposed revision to our privacy policy. This was a continuation of our ongoing effort to run Facebook in an open and transparent way. The goals of the revised policy were to make it more accessible and easier to understand. Excellent buzzwords in there like open and transparent. In reality maybe they are trying to do that but how hard are they trying and in the end, does it even matter? I ask this because although I use Facebook a fair amount (I check it every day but don’t get involved everyday) and I honestly was unaware that a review and comment period was even happening. Maybe I wasn’t paying attention (not the first time) but apparently I am not alone among the 300 million Facebook users. Facebook’s blog continues We’ve spent the last week reviewing each and every one of your comments. While a lot of people participated, the total number of people commenting did not reach the threshold of 7,000 that makes a vote necessary according to our Statement of Rights and Responsibilities. Because of this — and the fact that many of the comments were positive — we’ve decided to adopt the revised policy. We’ll be posting it in English, French, Italian, German and Spanish soon. You remember the 7,000 Rule from earlier this year? Based on how Facebook defines ‘a lot of participation’ probably not. Go to the post announcing the review period and you will see about 1500 people ‘liked’ this which is not a comment and there were just 450 plus comments. Add in the approximately 1,400 comments on the various language announcements on the Site Governance Page and you get about 2,000 comments in total. Regardless of how Facebook positions it that is not ‘a lot of participation’. There are over 477,000 fans on the Governance Page alone and these are the people that supposedly even give a rip (I did join today, btw). So what’s it all mean? It means that we are users and not participants in this community. People who read this blog are potential social media influencers and should probably get involved in shaping how this thing works. At least that seems to make sense. Until we vote though, there is little we can do or say because the 7,000 Rule is some great CYA for Facebook. So my question is do you even care what Facebook does with its policies? Also, if you feel wronged in the future by a policy and you haven’t done anything in the past to help shape it should anyone listen to any whining or complaining? Do you even have the right to complain? Just some food for thought. Pilgrim’s Partners: SponsoredReviews.com – Bloggers earn cash, Advertisers build buzz!

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Facebook and the 7,000

Social media marketing means when you use all the resources of social networking such as online communities, blogs and so forth in order to market and publicize your products. Social media marketing had been gaining great popularity because of its convenience and wide reach. The most common Social media marketing tools are Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, and YouTube. The way that Social media marketing works is to create an awareness and tempo about the vents, videos and blogs so that it is able to attract people’s attention towards it. This is almost like advertisement but in this case you are reaching out to the right people. Social media marketing is a way in which fans themselves talk about the brands that they prefer and in turn get to promote them. It is almost similar to word of mouth publicity. The best thing about Social media marketing is that there is a great amount of influence of the end users. They are able to comment and post articles about their experiences. Therein the control of the organization diminishes and this becomes a first person account. People tend to believe this more than the advertising spiel that they get to hear every day. The way that Social media marketing is headed we are sure that it is going to be around for a long time to come. Therefore when you participate in all the social networks available online you can form an internet marketing tool called Social media marketing. Social media marketing has several advantages linked with it. Let us look at a few of these: * There is an increase in the website traffic and you can track the visitors to your website. * The moment you are able to track your visitors to your website the task of converting them into a sale becomes easy. * You get lots of people viewing specific pages hence the kind of exposure that you get and that to towards people who matter is incomparable to anything else. * The brand value that you are trying to build up gets promoted sooner. As more and more people get to know it they start talking and discussing it. * The feeling of associating with the brand and the brand recollection happens. This helps the customer to retain the brand and build up brand loyalty. * Your business will develop further and you will be able to reach out to a wider range of customers.   In order for you to take advantage of this kind of advertising to the fullest what you need to do is to write and post articles frequently. You can leave comments on other people’s blogs and so forth. In the end you have to gain visibility.

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Getting the maximum out of Social media marketing

Nowadays, the business world has become too much competitive. Killer marketing or advertising campaign is the only way to beat your opponent. The main question is that while there are so many advertising methodologies available over the Internet such as article marketing, e-mail marketing, social media marketing, AdSense marketing. Then why one should go for viral marketing? Viral marketing is one of the vital ways of marketing where the author of the product doesn’t need to have the great concern for the development of marketing and the users of the product help in marketing. Facebook, Hotmail and You Tube have a lot of users and the users accelerate the marketing process. When a number of people use those services then more people knows about those services and the users invite other people to use those services. The numbers of users are increased exponentially and in that process the marketing process is accelerated. This is the main concept of viral marketing, which is now the effective key to success of online business. As the profitable and effective way of marketing, it is now well popular to the marketing gurus and developers of online business. Viral marketing is defined as the vital chain of marketing and the process becomes dynamic and automated in a stable position. Facebook is the perfect example of that situation and marketing media. Viral marketing is developed gradually in its stable state and the consumers or users act as the media of that marketing. The more people use that service, the more people are invited by the present users and more than more people use that service. The service is improved by the users and general people and that is the main benefit of these types of marketing. For the improvement of viral marketing the service should be user friendly and satisfy the requirements of the consumers. The new services should be come out from innovative thinking and suitable for the time and consumers. The main benefit of this marketing is not so satisfactory and beneficial. This process if not so dynamic to be observed in its initial stage. But with the interval of few periods the real outcome is observed and the revenue is increased gradually. Viral marketing is the helper and media of marketing like social media marketing. Different types of campaigns are observed in popular social media sites. From small to medium leveled the online business are dependable on this marketing and there are a lot of evidences of the improvement of those business. The social media sites are now the perfect place to give indirect advertisement and campaign. It is free but is the major turning point of online effective marketing. For this marketing, you don’t need to invest money, but simply you can place your position in the market of many people. As the improved and self generated process, viral marketing should be the perfect solution for rapid improvement of online business.

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What is viral marketing?

Interactive marketing as a whole is a good place to be relative to the rest of the marketing world. Anywhere where the worst numbers show low single digit decreases and the happy numbers are still in the positive teens despite a continued overall economic morass you have to smile at least a little. We need to, however, remember that the overall interactive marketing is doing fine it is still like any other market. That means, simply, that some industries are going to be much better off in the interactive space than others. It is not a silver bullet for everyone. Forrester is starting a series of reports that tell just how particular industries are utilizing the interactive marketing environment. The first is called “US Interactive Marketing Forecast by Industry, 2009-2014″. It is interesting to see how some of the verticals are using the medium in its various forms and what lessons can be potentially learned. Not surprisingly it’s the retail and financial sectors that account for nearly 1/ 3 of the interactive spend and that trend is likely to continue through 2014. What is interesting is that their overall marketing budgets still hold room for their growth to be significant. I wonder when other industries will find that they are completely under utilizing the Internet channel and will take more of their traditional spend online? Our readers are knee deep in this stuff every day. Do you see any verticals / industries that may be missing the boat to this point? Where are there spots in the B2B and B2C world that will be hot growth areas for the next five years for interactive marketing. C’mon now. Don’t think you have some big secret that you can’t share. Remember that 99.999 % of the people that hear your ‘great idea’ probably couldn’t even begin to figure out how to execute it so don’t hold back.

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Forrester Looks at Interactive Marketing by Segment

By Matt Wilson . Follow him @MattWilsonTV . We all have them—”social media friends”—people who we talk to online but most likely have never met in person. We connected with them because of a common interest via Twitter, engaged in interesting conversation with them and shared a bond, but we don’t really consider them a true friend. Truly using Twitter to its fullest potential means networking not just for casual online interaction but actually creating long lasting relationships. Real friends will shout from the rooftops to promote your brand, real friends collaborate, work together and would do anything for each other. Let’s start making these Twitter friends into your own global network of people who have a vested interest in each other’s success. Besides, what good are your friends if you don’t really know them? But don’t be a creep! Ew, you want to meet me in person? Is it really okay to meet people online? Yes! It’s important to realize that there is a real person behind that avatar—not just another click thru to your blog. Make people feel like they know you. Your Twitter brand should have both personal and professional elements to it. In order to create real relationships your Twitter friends should trust you. Your avatar must look like you! You want people to stop you at events because they recognize you from Twitter. Take the time to look at someone’s profile and website. Know more about your friends than just their handle. Read their bio, check out their website and ask about them. People want to know you care! Post videos of yourself and ask questions—the more interaction people have with you on Twitter, the closer people feel to you. Engage your audience! Help people! If you are helpful on Twitter, chances are you are helpful offline. Networking is all about giving—remember you have to give to get. Providing value on Twitter eventually creates value in real life. Compliment! Flattery goes a long way on Twitter. Tell someone you admire their work and think they are a leader and you are much more likely to make a real friend! Post Twitpics. Your personal brand should have a personality; make sure they know you are real. Take interesting pictures from your everyday life. It doesn’t have to be a picture of your children, simply try a picture from an event you are attending. Now take networking offline! Attend or organize a Tweetup. Use http://twtvite.com to send out invitations. Get a few real friends who are on Twitter together and invite all your respective Twitter friends. Schedule phone calls. Meet someone on Twitter who you’d like to know better? Ask to schedule a phone call. Send a DM and specify a time limit of 10 minutes. Nobody’s time will be wasted. Imagine you did this every day? Don’t want to pay long distance or give out your number? Invite a Twitter friend for a #VirtualCoffee meeting on Skype. Connect face to face and have a real conversation. Have a column on Tweetdeck specifically for people you’d like to meet in person. You can monitor people more closely this way by organizing friends into one big column, or segment them into geographic location. Never eat alone! Traveling? Make a conscious effort to meet people you’ve connected with on social media. Of course meet in a public place and keep things casual. Plan this in advance. Attend Events: Go to tweetups, networking events, conferences, keynote speeches, unconferences or anything with a hashtag on Twitter. Tag everything with a hashtag and let it be known you are looking to do some real life networking. Take the leap! Creating a network of global friends means going out being assertive. Don’t be shy—start approaching people. Set a goal for yourself of 5 real life connections each week. Connect with one person daily or knock them all out in a single day of the week. It’s time to start using Twitter to its potential. [image] © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . Turn Twitter Friends into Real Friends

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Turn Twitter Friends into Real Friends

Remember Twitter’s plans to make “retweeting” an official function? Sure you do, the mock-ups looked like this: Well, Twitter just announced the following: We’ve just activated a feature called retweet on a very small percentage of accounts in order to see how it works in the wild. Retweet is a button that makes forwarding a particularly interesting tweet to all your followers very easy. In turn, we hope interesting, newsworthy, or even just plain funny information will spread quickly through the network making its way efficiently to the people who want or need to know. So keep your eyes peeled, because you might be one of the lucky ones! PS. If you’re not seeing the retweet option, Twitter has a consolation prize for you. It’s cleaning up the spam in trending topics .

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Twitter Rolling Out Retweets, Rolling Over Trends Spam

By Jade Craven – Follow her @jadecraven . “Jack Dorsey and Biz Stone always said that the best way to get real value out of Twitter was to follow a small number of people; it was never their intention for people to aim to follow more than 150-200 people” from Why Twitter Lists Change Everything by @davetroy Twitter has once again changed the social economy. There has been a lot of buzz around the blogosphere regarding lists. People want to know how it can improve their use of twitter and how they can help others. I hunted through the plethora of posts to find the best content regarding lists. In this post, I will ‘list’ the best quotes regarding twitter lists and show how others believe it will change the dynamics. Before I discuss the common thoughts, here are two resources: Listorious TLISTS Ways to create an extremely useful list A list is more useful, and compelling, than any one person. You should list compelling people and include yourself in a list when necessary. Beyond that, there were three main tips people gave to help you create an awesome list. Create a very specific list name: There are many generic lists that have little use to the general public. Elaine Ellis gave a great tip when she suggested users make “the lists as specific as possible, include geography, profession, topics, demographics, etc.” Laura Spencer gave further advice when she recommended that if “a list is being designed for subscribers as well as the list owner, the list name should reflect the potential content of that list to other Twitter users.” These tips are solid but not always practical. You are limited to only 25 characters so you may need to find creative ways to describe the people on your list. Some interesting examples I found were: @drwarwick/mytop100 @sammutimer/outstanding-connectors @KulpreetSingh/smart-unique-engaging @SheilaS/they-make-me-smart @smartasshat/wouldchewtheirgum @ManVsDebt/weneedtoconnect-yesyou These names are both useful as a personal reference as well as letting others know how useful the people are. Segment the list if necessary Ensure the list is really helpful to the reader. This means that you should segment according to what would be useful to other twitter users. Two examples of business doing this really well are Marve l and Caroline Serviced Apartments . Promote the twitter list elsewhere Create badges for those listed Create graphics directing people to relevant twitter lists Link to twitter lists from your blog, especially a company one Promote the list in your offline advertising material Buy advertising spots for your list Issues with twitter lists: They are exclusionary by nature As I pointed out in 8 Things to consider before using twitter lists , people may feel snubbed if they aren’t included on a public list. Andy Beal wrote about this further at Marketing Pilgrim. For example, what if you created a list of top technology CEOs, but didn’t include your boss. What if your lists of affiliate marketing gurus left off your friend because, well let’s face it, she’s not that good at affiliate marketing. Keep your list public at your own risk! Twitter is already full of cliques, Lists just formalizes them and confirms your worst fears–you are indeed a nobody. CV Harquail expanded on this further in her post at Authentic Organizations. Being on many Twitter Lists is NOT “a barometer of cool” — it’s a measure of ease of Categorization. Easy to categorize => Similar to others => Easy to ‘list’ Not every person you follow is similar enough to other people you follow to warrant their being placed on one of your Twitter lists. Laura Spencer provided an example regarding multitasking tweeters Many Twitter users tweet more than one type of information. There is no real way to segregate the marketing and PR information that a user may be tweeting from any other information that they share. So, several people have agreed that people may be upset by not being included in many lists. There is also people feeling offended by not being grouped in a friends list. This issue really came to the spotlight when Chris Brogan said: I realized what I’m not going to like about them: they will exclude people. Sure, on the one hand, they’re a great way to group people and information together. For instance, I might make a list for news feeds. I might make a list about travel, like hotels and airlines. I think there are some uses that are important, but for the most part, the way I’m going to deal with my listmaking is in private, so that people don’t feel left out or less important, or whatever else they’re going to feel. Man, it stinks feeling left out Some people have argued that this is an over reaction. There are two quotes by Robert Scoble that stood out: Numbers don’t matter. It’s WHAT LISTS people put you on and what they are named that really matter UPDATE: I had lunch yesterday with @nk who runs the team at Twitter who makes lists. He says “following” someone is just another form of lists. Since there’s 45 million people on Twitter and only about 100,000 that Chris is following, I’d guess that Chris is exclusionary. I can see this from both sides. While the numbers don’t matter, people do feel left out. I’ve seen it happen. It shouldn’t, but it does. People are making a list by following people but in Chris Brogans case, that requires an opt in. All someone has to do is follow and generally he will reciprocate. However people will feel left out regardless of what you do in social media. You aren’t replying to them enough. You don’t reciprocate invites on other social networks. What do you think? Be honest. Did you feel left out because you weren’t included on a list? I know whenever I read tweets about people making lists of their friends, I immediately check to see if I’m on it. Its an ego boost. I’ve also felt disappointed at only being on about 25 lists. May lead to reputation management issues Kevin Makice was one of the first to raise this issue at Blog Schmog Web consultant Orli Yakuel discovered during Beta testing that you don’t have the ability to opt out of lists. If someone wants to label you a spammer, noisy or something you don’t want to be, you may not have the ability to reject that label. It may mean your only recourse is to communicate with the list owner in the same way you might engage someone who writes a bad review of your product. Similarly, exclusion from a high-profile list may damage your reputation. On the other hand, lists may simply increase the social pressure to recognize strangers in a new way, beyond returning a follow. There is also issue of gaming the system to damage reputations. Dave Troy wrote about this further You can even put someone in a list (cool people), have them publicize that, and then change the name of that list to something less flattering (douchebags, or worse). The issue of derogatory lists alone is one that Twitter will need to address. However, this can also be a good thing for brands. As Sampad Swain pointed out “When you check your “Lists Following You” tab, then you’ll see what people think about you and thats why they have added you in that list – both from personal front or professional one. “ Secondly, “the lists you create says a lot about you”. Making lists pertaining to your professional field helps build a perception around you. This is a good thing. What do you think? I think there will be issues with managing your reputation, yet these already exist on twitter. I think we will just need to find new tools for monitoring and handling potentially damaging tweets. You can’t consent to categorization. As Mark Trapp pointed out in Twitter Lists Make Twitter Dangerous to User Most crucially, a person cannot consent to the categorization. This can make defamatory lists stand out, especially when the words used stand out from a sea of others. You can block a list, and the user, but the damage may be done before people/brands have a change to respond. Additionally, people can’t opt in to a list. This presents two problems: You have to wait until someone creates a list, or create it yourself. In this regard, wefellow is still superior for categorization People can’t be on a list, even if the creater wanted to allow opt ins. There are two ways I’ve seen people work around this. Example 1: Huffington Post had this text on one of their posts about twitter lists. Do you know a tweeter who’s perfect for one of these lists? Email us at twitterlists@huffingtonpost.com! Example 2: Freelance switc h sent out several tweets inviting people to be part of the i-love-freelance list. If you LOVE the freelance life I’m creating a list of Freelancers so Tweet @ freelancesw #ilovefreelance I will favorite them all and then add them when my lists appear, so keep tweeting #ilovefreelance heww, twitter list #ilovefreelance so far http://bit.ly/ilovefreelance tweet @ freelancesw #ilovefreelance some cool peeps in there! In the first case, a blog relies on the readers – the wisdom of crowds – to provide them with the names of relevant twitter users. In the second, people choose to opt in to a list. This way @freelancesw has a list of engaged, passionate community members. Matt Rhodes gave great suggestions at the Fresh Networks blog A possible solution is to make lists collaborative. ____ suggested giving the list creator to make some, but not all, of their lists collaborative. I would also like to see appointing others to help manage a certain list. What do you think? I understand that this is still a new feature but it could be improved by giving users (paid or unpaid) additional options. In the meantime we will have to find creative ways to involve the community. I found two great solutions but I’m sure that others exist. If you find them, please share them in the comments. A list makes makes twitter impersonal. Kevin Makice gave some really relevant points in his post about the impact of twitter lists . People often get an email when someone follows them, or will go through their own list. This may give them a prompt to contact you. Following a list gives little incentive to engage. It encourages pruning, as it eliminates the need to follow to keep track of them. Also, the lists encourage users to “treat the channel as simply information broadcast.” They may not follow at all. This means that they reduce the means for private communication and the chance to take the relationship off site. Many users found other issues that contributed to the impersonal vibe. Amber star found it interesting that you can not tweet to a list. For example @twitter/team does not send a tweet to the entire “team”. I am assuming that you can watch live updates filtered to this list, but more compelling would be the ability to consume and produce at this list level, so that while viewing the live stream of say @twitter/team, you could also tweet a status update, and it would automatically be sent to the @twitter/team. I have tweeted about this in the past, in what I call Twitter 2.0, where I see twitter as a hierarchy, where one can consume and produce tweets and any level within the hierarchy. Terrence O’Brien observed that it wasn’t easy to read all the tweets. Since each list constitutes its own page, we don’t consider this to be an easy way of reading tweets for the large number of people you’re following. This may change once the third party apps start integrating twitter lists into their offerings. Sampad Swain identified that there was no easy way to search lists. He recommended that Twitter should enable some search option which makes searching “Twitter Lists” easier. On this regards, Twitter can integrate “Twitter Lists Search” in Twitter search only with two tabs in place of one tab (like Google). What do you think? I think that twitter lists can make it impersonal but it can also improve how you connect with other users. It depends on how you use it and how you find ways around the current limitations. What are your experiences? There are more opportunities to game The spammers will buy their way onto high profile lists. You get twenty lists and 500 on each one. Thus, as Dave Troy pointed out, there is a scarcity factor. “Everybody’s making collections, and there are certainly people who will pay and be paid for listings. Count on it.” Alex Wilhelm was one of the first to identify spam arriving on twitter lists. He said that: Twitter needs to implement a “report list as spam” feature right away. In fact, combine the two, and have a “report list and spam and block user” button. What do you think? I know there are many opportunities to game. I feel uncomfortably with the possibility of giving spammers ideas, but would love to hear your opinions in the comments. People may accidentally out you This was a concern given by Todd R Jordan . The two examples given were related to location and sexuality. This may cause problems for those who have a separate online and offline presence. Additionally, it is possibly to accidentally invade someones privacy. I recommend that users are cautious about some methods of categorization. It will reduce SOME of the noise on twitter One of the things that caused a lot of buzz was how it could reduce the amount of follow fridays. Many people reported that it made them reassess how they consumed their content online. Colin Alsheimer said that “What stopped me from using it (twitter) as a content delivery service was the massive amounts of noise I would have to filter through to get to the content I wanted to read, when I wanted to read it. If there’s no noise, this means that the accounts are simply set up as content pushing news feeds. Almost like an RSS feed just in a format that’s tailored to social sharing.“ He said the solution was to create noise free related lists. Robert Scoble was the among the first to raise this issue in his post about using twitter lists to replace the google reader . He gave several reasons. Twitter is a lot faster than RSS readers Twitter delivers the news faster than RSS Twitter doesn’t tell you the number of news item you haven’t read It is easier to can twitter headlines There are also downsides to using twitter to replace RSS readers. Again, it is worth really assessing how you want to consume your content. Another benefit is being able to separate the really active users. Blake Waddill said: When you start making lists, will you split super active twitters into a separate group for people who rarely tweet so you can hear more of what the quiet people have to say, or will you let them be drowned out? I’m an active tweeter, and people have told me that they are unfollowing me because I am too noise. I can see twitter lists being useful for these people. Brands may change how they use twitter Colin Alsheimer also said that lists will give brands the push needed to segment their twitter accounts. He said: “We may be entering a period where major brands and online personalities start to fragment or split a single Twitter account into many focused, specialized accounts, for the purpose of getting onto as many Twitter lists as possible.” I believe that many brands should be segmenting their accounts. Just look at the awesome job Marvel and Zappos are doing in this regard. If twitter lists provides companies with the impetus to change their social media usage, then thats brilliant. I would love to here about any examples from the corporate sector. Your Turn. Social media is constantly evolving. This is still new and this post only covered a fraction of the commentary that is going on around this issue. Feel free to contribute in the comments. In particular, we would be interested in: How you are planning to use the service Interesting blog posts you have found Some of the benefits/concerns with this new feature. © 2008 TwiTip Twitter Tips . Twitter Lists In Detail or, “Yo Dawg, I Heard U Like Lists!” Related posts: Essential: 8 Things to Consider Before Using Twitter Lists Twitter Tips for Beginners: Lessons from the Evolution of Blogging Part 2 – Link Lists Construct your own ‘Top 10 Must Follow’ List as it relates to your own Niche

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Twitter Lists In Detail or, “Yo Dawg, I Heard U Like Lists!”