Data from comScore’s MobiLens shows that 72.2 million Americans accessed social networking sites or blogs on their mobile device in August 2011, an increase of 37 percent in the past year.
The study also provided new insights into how mobile users interact with social media, finding that more than half read a post from an organization, brand or event while on their mobile device.
“Social media is one of the most popular and fastest growing mobile activities, reaching nearly one third of all U.S. mobile users,” said Mark Donovan, comScore senior vice president for mobile.
“This behavior is even more prevalent among smartphone owners with three in five accessing social media each month, highlighting the importance of apps and the enhanced functionality of smartphones to social media usage on mobile devices.”
More than Half of Mobile Social Networkers Access Sites on a Near Daily Basis
In August 2011, more than 72.2 million people accessed social networking sites or blogs on their mobile device, an increase of 37 percent from the previous year. Nearly 40 million U.S. mobile users, more than half of the mobile social media audience, access these sites almost every day, demonstrating the importance of this activity to people’s daily routines.
Research also indicated that although more people accessed these sites via their mobile browser, the social networking app audience grew five times faster in the past year. While the mobile browsing social networking audience grew 24 percent to 42.3 million users in the past year, the mobile social networking app audience surged 126 percent to 38.5 million.
Frequency of Use and Method of Access for Mobile Social Networking/Blog Audience 3 Month Avg. Ending Aug. 2011 vs. 3 Month Avg. Ending Aug. 2010 Total U.S. Mobile Subscribers Ages 13+ (Smartphone and Non-Smartphone) Source: comScore MobiLens
Total Audience (000)
Aug-2010
Aug-2011
% Change
Accessed Social Networking Site or Blog Ever in Month
52,733
72,252
37%
Accessed Social Networking Site or Blog Almost Every Day
25,272
39,854
58%
Social networking Access Method:
Via Mobile Browser
34,192
42,251
24%
Via Application
17,002
38,453
126%
Facebook Mobile Audience Approaches 60 Million Users
A look at selected social networking brands, Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn, revealed that each grew their mobile audiences by at least 50 percent in the past year. Facebook was home to the largest mobile audience among the three destinations with more than 57 million mobile users in August, up 50 percent from the previous year. Twitter saw its mobile audience jump 75 percent to 13.4 million people, while LinkedIn’s mobile audience climbed 69 percent to 5.5 million users.
Audience* for Selected Social Networking Brands 3 Month Avg. Ending Aug. 2011 Total U.S. Mobile Subscribers Ages 13+ (Smartphone and Non-Smartphone) Source: comScore MobiLens
Total Audience (000)
Aug-2010
Aug-2011
% Change
Facebook
38,240
57,332
50%
Twitter
7,639
13,375
75%
LinkedIn
3,234
5,482
69%
*Includes mobile browser and app access.
70 Percent of Mobile Social Networkers Posted a Status Update While on Their Mobile Device
Understanding how mobile users interact with social media is important for brands looking to engage with on-the-go consumers. comScore recently released new social media metrics through its MobiLens service, offering deeper insights into mobile consumers’ social media activities. Of those accessing social networking sites or blogs on their mobile device in August 2011, 80.3 percent read posts from people known personally, while 69.5 percent posted status updates while on their mobile device.
Mobile social networkers also were likely to interact with brands on these sites with more than half (52.9 percent) reading posts from organizations/brands/events. One in three mobile social networkers received a coupon/offer/deal, with one in four (27.7 percent) clicking on an ad while on a social networking site.
Donovan added, “Advertisers and marketers should take note – mobile users are not only engaging with their friends through social networking, but a majority are also interacting with brands in these social media environments. Knowing that fans and followers engage with branded content on mobile devices opens the door to a world of opportunity for location-based services.”
Mobile Social Networking Activities 3 Month Avg. Ending Aug. 2011 Total U.S. Mobile Subscribers Ages 13+ (Smartphone and Non-Smartphone) Source: comScore MobiLens
Total Social Networking/Blog Audience (000)
% of Social Networking/Blog Audience
Total Audience Accessing Social Networking Sites or Blogs: 13+ yrs old
Who’s attending Internet Summit 2011? Four weeks until the event set for November 15-16 at the Raleigh, NC Convention Center, a better question is who’s not attending!
With over 120 speakers and presenters, Internet Summit 2011 is jam-packed with top level content focused on the latest digital trends, online marketing techniques and IT best practices.
We’ve been covering TechMedia’s digital conferences since the very first one, and we have to admit, this is the most impressive lineup yet. Stay tuned for interviews with participants here on the TechJournal leading up to the event.
Here’s a sampling of firms already scheduled to attend:
1st Degree Marketing
3tailer
919 Marketing Company
A10 Clinical Solutions
ABB
Accelerence
ACCSports.com
Adam-Bryce
AdKeeper
Advanced Energy
Adzerk
Agile Marketing Group
AirClean Systems
All American Corporation
Alloso Technologies
ALPHA Marketing
Alternate Access
American Society for Microbiology
Americaneagle.com
Aon
APC
Apple
Argyle Social
Arketi Group
ASPE ROI
Atlantic Webworks
Atlantis Group
Autoshop Solutions
BB&T
BBH Media
BCBSNC
BEM
Bespoke Arsenal
BGEA
Big Think
BIOPHARMA ADVISORS
Blogads
BlueGlass Interactive
Bosch Packaging Services
Brand Fuel
Brand.net
BRI
Brick Marketing
Brightleaf Consulting Group
Brocadiant IP
Bronto
Brooks Bell
Buddy Media
Bulk TV & Internet
Bulwark Exterminating
BurlapSky
Burson-Marsteller
Burt’s Bees
CAI
Cameron Carmichael
Capstrat
CareAnyware
Carolina Biological Supply Company
Carolina Meadows
Carrot-Top Industries
Cary Academy
Caterpillar
CBC New Media
Cenduit
Center for Responsible Lending
Centerline Digital
Cerium Capital
CESI Debt Solutions
ChannelAdvisor
Charlotte Regional Partnership
Chatsworth Products
Cherry Bekaert & Holland
Cisco Systems
City of Raleigh
ClearSight Creative Resources
Clearspring Technologies
Coalmarch Productions
Command Partners
Comporium
Compuware
Connections Too
Consultwebs.com
Contactology
Contender Capital
Contour Products
Craven Community College
Cree
CROSSROADS PUBLIC RELATIONS
DASH Systems
DataChambers
DataFlux
Dealer Ignition
DecisionPoint
Deere & Company
Delta Apparel
Devonhall Publishing
Dex One
Digital Element
Digital Strategies and Services
Direct Mobile
Discovery Communications
Distil
Distilled
Dominion Enterprises
Downtown Raleigh Alliance
Dreamcatcher Trading
Duke Medicine
Duke University
Easter Seals
Easyfish Marketing
EatDrinkDeals
Eaton Corporation
Eckel & Vaughan
Emerald Isle Realty
Emma
Ernst & Young
ESPN
ExactByte
Exclusively Weddings
FanBridge
FeatureTel/Telovations
FinOps Solutions
FireFold
Fireside Distributors
First Bank
Fitter Happier Consulting
FitTwin.com
Fleishman Hillard
For Rent Media Solutions
Forma
French/West/Vaughan
fsb
Full Scale Solutions
GiftOasis.com
Global Value Commerce
GlobalSpec
GoECart
Google
Governor’s Institute
Gowalla
Grant Thornton LLP
Greater Raleigh CVB
HaggleBuyers.com
HBA of Raleigh-Wake Co.
Heartbeat Marketing
Heta Corporation
HIPPO Internet Marketing Training
HireNetworks
hood river lavender farms
HowStuffWorks.com
Hughes Pittman & Gupton
Hutchison Law Group
IBM
iContact
IDBS
IDEA Fund Partners
If It Barks
Ignite Social Media
IMLeagues
INDA
Inertia
Infogroup
Integritive
Interface Technologies
Intersouth Partners
Inversion Group
Investors Mosaic
iT People Corporation
It’s Your Turn
Jaargon
JDSU
John Deere
Julie Holmes Design
Kadro
KD Web Strategies
Kerr Drug
KeyphraSEOlogy
Khush
Kramden Institute
L A Foster & Associates
Lakewinds Natural Foods
Left Click Studios
Lenovo
Lenox
Lewis Advertising
LexisNexis
LFG
Lincoln Financial
LinkMeIn
ListLikeThis
Litle & Co
Llamawerx
Lohmueller
Low Fat Designs
Lowes Foods
Loyalese
Lulu.com
Lumi Mobile
M.Y. Edge
Madison River Ventures
Manning Fulton
Marin Software
Market America
Market Vue Partners
Marketing Pilgrim
Marketing Resource Solutions
Marshall Institute
Maxpoint Interactive
Media Two Interactive
MedThink Communications
MemberHub.com
Meredith Communications
Method Savvy
Microsoft
Monster MediaWorks
Mooty
Motricity
Mountainside Digital Media
mPower Consulting
myYearbok
NBT Partners
NC National Guard
NC SBTDC
NC Sea Grant
NC State University
NCASI
NCSU
Net Friends
Net32
NetApp
Netsertive
New Kind
New Media Campaigns
Newland Communities
NSTAR Global Services
O3
OtherScreen
Paragon Application Systems
PARcycles
Parker Web
Patagonia Health
Pathos Ethos
PBS
Peak10
Pegasus Lighting
Pentaho
Peoplefluent
PGN
PHE
Phonebooth.com
Piedmont Plastics
Pivot Point Group
Pluot’s
PointClick Technologies
Pointer Advertising
Polished Geek
POLITICO
POOLCENTER.com
Poole College of Management
Poyner Spruill
PPD
Progressive
Project Right Track
Protea Digital
Prudential YSU
Prymak
PSA TechSure
QOL-Apps
Quaero
Quickrelay Networks
Railinc
Rankin McKenzie
RBC Bank
ReadWriteWeb
Red Hat
Relevantor
Religent Health
Rex Healthcare
Ripple Group
RMM
Robinson Bradshaw & Hinson
Rockett Interactive
RSA Security
RTI International
RTP Designs
S&A Cherokee
SafeNet
Sage
SAI Digital
Salix
Sally Johns Design
SAManage
SAS
SBTDC
SC GtUG
Scale Finance
Scenera
ScentTrail E-Commerce
Science Applications International
SciQuest
Scribble Studio
Semetric Media
Sensus
SEOinhouse
SharedVue
ShareFile
Siemens Energy
Signal
Signature Cuisine
Silver Pearl
Sinclair & Co.
Sirchie
Skookum Digital Works
SkyGrid
Skyline Exhibits / The Holt Group
Small Footprint
Smart Online
Smith Moore Leatherwood
Smith, Anderson
Snyder Interactive
SOBcon
Social Buzz Lab
Southern Capitol Ventures
Spain Business Advisors
Spider Digital
SplendidCRM Software
Sprung Media Makers
Square 1 Bank
State Farm Insurance
Storkie
STORMS Associates
Stripes Group
StumbleUpon
Symplegades
Syncfusion
Taddy
TagMan
TagSeats
Tangram Media
Tavve
Team Powersports
TechCFO RTP
TechCo
Tekelec
Teknicks
TenPearls
Terraine
The Andrus Group
The Bloom Agency
The Body Shop
The brpr Group
The Doug And Jon Show
The Green Kangaroo
The Signature Agency
The Word Factory
TheAvenueToTheFuture
TheeDesign Studio
TheLadders
Think Technology Advisors
Three Ships Media
Time Warner
TimelyText
Tizbi
tranquil hosting
Trone
Tropical Foods
Troutman Sanders LLP
TRUSTe
tw telecom
Twiddy & Co
Twitpic
UNC
UNC Charlotte
UNC Wilmington
Usability Sciences
Vaco
Value Drug Company
Van Tharp Institute
VaynerMedia
VCE
Vegan Bodybuilding & Fitness
Verisign
Vibrant Media
Viddler
Virtual Race Bags
VisionPoint Marketing
Wake Tech
Walker Interactive
WDI
Web Analytics Demystified
WebCookingClasses.com
Wells Fargo
Whitmeyer Tuffin
Williams Mullen
WilsonMcGuire Creative
Windstream
Womble Carlyle
Work By Kevin
workplace options
WUNC
Wyrick Robbins Yates & Ponton LLP
XPIENT Solutions
Yahoo!
Yardi Systems
ZDNet
Walter Isaacson, who penned the new biography of Apple’s Steve Jobs that goes on sale Monday, is slated to be interviewed on 60 Minutes Sunday Night. It’s unusual for the CBS news magazine show, 60 Minutes to delve much into the tech world, but Jobs’ influence is felt in many areas – design, innovative thinking, role model.
Isaacson’s biography, originally set for 2012 publication, was moved up to Oct. 24. The author did dozens of interviews with Jobs, including one final talk just before Jobs’ death Oct. 5. 60 Minutes revealed the Isaacson appearance in a tweet.
Apple says that more than a million people have already shared memories, messages and feelings about Jobs on a remembrance page, sent via rememberingsteve@apple.com.
Wall Street Journal says Microsoft, others putting together proposal to buy Yahoo
The Wall Street Journal reports that Silver Lake Partners, a private equity firm, and one of its investors, Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, and Microsoft Corp. are putting together a proposal to buy Yahoo.
Groupon may go for $12B IPO
Groupon is likely to file for an initial offering of public stock at a valuation of around $12 billion, according to the New York Times.
That’s down quite a bit from the $25 billion to $30 billion valuation figures bandied about previously.
Federated Media, Automatic team for WordPress ads
Federated Media, a digital ad company, and WordPress developer Automatic, are teaming up to give WordPress.com blog owners the ability to put ads on their site.
Federated Media will help its clients target their ads to specific audiences on the blogs.
WordPress.com (not the free WordPress.org content management system nor the WordPress VIP service) have limitations on what they can change, so most third-party ad solutions are not supported.
This new agreement can help WordPress.com’s mostly casual blogs bring in more money, although it is not clear how much the two companies plan to share with the bloggers.
AT&T activated more than 1 million iPhone 4S devices
AT&T today announced it activated more than 1 million iPhone 4S’ as of Tuesday, making it the most successful iPhone launch in the company’s history. AT&T was the first carrier in the world to launch iPhone in 2007 and is the only U.S. carrier to support iPhone 4S with 4G speeds.
B2B marketers are moving away from traditional marketing tactics and toward online content marketing. In fact, 82 percent of respondents now use content marketing in their programs, which makes it more popular than search marketing (70 percent), events (68 percent) and public relations (64 percent) and over two times more popular than print, TV or radio advertising (32 percent).
So says HiveFire Inc., an online content marketing company that surveyed more than 365 marketers from organizations of all sizes and across a variety of sectors.
Respondents cited driving leads as the most important marketing objective for their organizations (78 percent). But, they have to deliver on this without a lot of help: limited budget and staff were the top two marketing challenges (28 and 23 percent, respectively).
Together, these factors have driven B2B marketers to adopt content marketing because it helps them achieve top objectives without using a large portion of their budgets (half of marketers dedicate less than 30 percent of budget to content marketing).
In order to implement content marketing programs in an efficient and effective manner, the study found content curation – the process of finding, organizing and sharing online content — as a preferred tactic. More than half of B2B marketers (56 percent) now implement content curation, a notable 17 percent increase in adoption since just six months ago when HiveFire conducted its Content Curation Adoption Survey 2011. Of those who implement and measure their content curation programs, nearly three quarters (74 percent) said content curation is successfully driving results.
Other key findings include:
The top two objectives of content marketing programs are to engage customers and prospects (82 percent) and drive sales (55 percent).
Sales cycle does not impact the adoption of content marketing programs: 83 percent with a year or longer sales cycle use it; 86 percent with a one-three month sales cycle use it; and 66 percent with a one-seven day sales cycle use it.
The time challenge associated with content curation is diminishing — it decreased four percent from the Content Curation Adoption Survey issued six months earlier, likely due to content curation tools and newly-established best practices streamlining processes.
“B2B marketing as we’ve known it will never be the same,” said Pawan Deshpande, CEO, HiveFire. “The future of marketing is not about selling so much as it is about engaging. This is what resonates with customers and why marketers have embraced content marketing in such large numbers. This change has been coming over time but content curation has certainly accelerated the shift because it removes many of the pain points commonly associated with content marketing.”
The complete findings of the survey will be shared with all participants and are also available for download on HiveFire’s website, www.getcurata.com. Over 365 marketers from organizations of all sizes and across a variety of sectors participated in the survey, which was conducted online in August 2011.
TechMedia’s Internet Summit is bringing 120 digital media, marketing and business mavens to the Raleigh, NC, Convention Center Nov. 15-16, but discounted early registration for the event, which is shaping up as the largest ever, ends this Friday, Oct. 14.
With more than 75 individual presentations, 5 forward looking panels, and keynotes by NY Times best-selling author & ‘Social Media King’ Gary Vaynerchuk and Gowalla co-founder Josh Williams the event promises to give your business savvy a boost.
Over 120 industry innovators and thought leaders from prime brands like Google, Microsoft, ESPN, StumbleUpon and many more, will be on hand to share their insight, spark new ideas, and expand your understanding on issues and topics that matter to you.
The Internet Summit expects nearly 2,000 attendees at Internet Summit 2011 making it the largest Digital, Media & Tech Conference in the Southeast — offering you unparalleled opportunities to connect and network with your peers and business colleagues.
Can Amazon’s new tablet computer, reportedly a souped up version of its popular Kindle e-reader, compete with Apple’s iPad? Thus far, would-be tablet competitors have not fared well against Apple brand power and the iPad.
Motorola, Acer, and Blackberry maker Research in Motion all tried to grab a piece of the tasty looking tablet computer market, but their efforts failed to make a real dent in Apple’s iPad share. Motorola did manage to see off its TouchPads, the most recent entry in the market, at fire sale prices of $99 each (and may make more available next month).
But the New York Times says a competitor is on the verge of introducing “the best-placed challenger of all: Amazon.com.” Quoting analysts, the Times says the Amazon tablet will undercut Apple’s price by about half and sell for around $250. It will have a 7 inch touch screen, with a bigger screen model coming in a year.
The Amazon device, while possibly not quite as powerful as an iPad, will handle the uses most people want from a tablet computer, easy access to email and the Web, and to Amazon’s vast store of books, music, and videos. It is the only Apple rival with the later advantage.
Whether it is a serious iPad competitor or not, it will certainly give Barnes & Noble’s color Nook some grief in the marketplace. B&N is striving to switch to digital before it ends up in the same place as its competitor, Borders, which will soon be completely gone.
One analyst quoted by the Times expects the Amazon tablets to sell as many as five million devices initially.
TechMediaNetwork nabs $33M financing to broaden reach
-TechMediaNetwork Inc. a technology media company that produces news and reviews in the technology and science verticals, today announced a $33 million Series B financing from ABS Capital Partners, a leading growth equity investor. Existing investors Village Ventures and Highway 12 Ventures also participated in the round.
TMN will use the funds to increase its acquisition program, further expand its growing news organization, enhance its monetization strategies and increase the distribution of its content. As a result of the financing, ABS Capital General Partner Ralph Terkowitz and Principal Paul Mariani will join TMN’s board of directors.
“Both organically and through complementary acquisitions, we are constantly looking to strengthen and broaden our expansion in the technology news market,” said Jerry Ropelato, CEO and founder of TechMediaNetwork. “The increased reach and influence of our network will continue to deliver more value to our readers, affiliates and advertising partners.”
TechMediaNetwork delivers technology news and product reviews across its 16 different web properties, featuring such flagship sites as LAPTOP, SPACE.com, TopTenREVIEWS and TechNewsDaily. TMN connects consumers, small publishers, advertisers and ecommerce vendors through a network of trusted information, revenue opportunities and audience reach. T
The Company has syndication partners, including Yahoo!, MSNBC.com and the websites of Fox News and CBS News, and advertisers such as American Express, AT&T, Canon, General Motors, HP, Kodak, Sony, Symantec, Toyota and Warner Bros.
Tumblr cranks the wheel on $85M funding
Tumblr, the blogging platform that soared from 2 billion page views a month earlier this year to $13 billion now, and boasts 30 million blogs generating 40 million posts a day, has raised a massive $85 million funding.
Led by Greylock Partners and Insight Venture Partners, the round included The Chernin Group, Sir Richard Branson, Spark Capital, Union Square Ventures and Sequoia Capital.
WordPress, by comparison, supplies the platform for more than 59 million websites.
Tumblr also surpasses both Wikipedia and Twitter in pageviews and does about half as many as AOL and Craigslist, according to TechCrunch.
More than 299 million people view more than 2.5 billion pages each month on WordPress.com, according to the site’s own statistics page.
Do you know why Tumblr generates so many pageviews? It’s because they make it easy to connect to other blogs and bloggers and scroll rapidly through page after page of posts. I sometimes look at 100 pages in half an hour. — Allan Maurer
With more than 175 million users, it can be difficult to get your voice heard on Twitter, especially by those in your industry. Because of this, companies like SEO.com, politicians, celebrities and other Twitter users are hosting Twitter chats.
We’ve participated in a number of professional and personal interest Twitter chats. They may not be the most direct form of communication, but they do often engage top people from an industry or interest area and provide a chance to interact with them not easily achieved otherwise.
The chats, similar to Internet chat rooms, are started by people who want to speak to many members of an industry all at once. Twitter users discovered they could put a hashtag, or #, in front of a title to create a group of like-minded tweets to be followed. When they search for the title of a chat with a hashtag, they see a live, streaming discussion, which creates a forum.
Blogchat reaching 2 million a week
One of the longest-running Twitter chats is #Blogchat, which started in March 2009.
Each week the group discusses a different topic related to blogging, #Blogchat founder Mack Collier explained.
“A Sunday night chat will generate anywhere from 10 to 20 million impressions,” he said in a telephone interview.
Though he knew people have lots of questions about blogging, Collier said he did not expect #Blogchat to reach nearly two million people each week.
“The big reason why it has grown is simply because I have stuck with it,” he said. “I love the conversations on Twitter and I love connecting with people … I’ve had so many people tell me that Blogchat has been a huge help for them.”
He advised businesses considering starting a Twitter chat to not focus their discussions on selling products.
“Instead, think about how your customers are going to use the products … Most people enjoy Blogchat because there is so much information” Collier said. “For those trying to get a chat off the ground, the biggest hurdle is having the chat as frequently as possible.”
Twitter chats encourage networking by segmenting the market for you. Those following the chat are already interested in the topic, creating a targeted audience. Finding a chat on a specific topic is easy by searching the keywords in Twitter.
#SEOchat is a weekly Twitter discussion co-hosted by Ash Buckles, president of SEO.com, a professional SEOfirm specializing in search engine optimization.
Buckles said Twitter chats are effective ways to engage people in your industry.
SEOchat shares ideas
“SEOchat has grown into a forum where top industry experts discuss their findings and where industry newbies can learn more,” Buckles said. “Twitter chats allow you to help others, which in turn promotes your brand.”
Greg Shuey, vice president of client services for SEO.com, co-hosts #SEOchat. New connections he has made through the weekly discussions have been the primary benefit, he said.
“We created SEOchat because we wanted people to have a place where they could share the latest ideas and discoveries in SEO,” Shuey added. “We also wanted business owners to be able get SEO help for their websites.”
#SEOchat is every Thursday at 9 p.m. Eastern time.
“Simply by searching ‘#SEOchat’ anyone can follow everything the chat is saying,” Shuey explained. “The best part for me though is seeing business owners using the chat as a resource. That’s when I know it’s fulfilling its purpose.”
If a chat does not exist about a particular topic, Shuey said it is easy to start your own. Choose a title for the chat and place a hashtag in front of it. Announce you are beginning by tweeting the information to your followers. Mention those who are not following you in your tweets so others will find out about the chat.
Popular Twitter chats for marketing and public relations professionals include: #smbiz, #hcsm, #journchat, #brandchat, #socialchat and #commschat.
The social blogging site Tumblr has seen its unique user base soar in the last year, gaining 183 percent from May 2010 to May 2011, according to the Nielsen Co. “State of the Media: Social Media Report Q3 2011.
Nielsen says Tubmbr enjoyed 11.9 unique visitors in May, up from 4.2 million just a year ago. The site averages 21,280 messages and links posted daily.
Tumblr surpassed the number of blogs hosted by WordPress in June. It currently hosts 29 million blogs.
Just over 57 percent of Tumblr user are under the age of 34.
Tumblr is very visually oriented. Its easy-to-use system also makes it ultra simple to reblog posts from those followed on Tumblr. It hosts many fashion oriented blogs, personal blogs, food blogs, many film or film star focused blogs, media outlets galore, and a significant number of porn blogs.
It can be searched by tags and users can place tags they follow (such as “tech” or “business” or “news”) on a sidebar of their dashboard. Many users create multiple blogs and it is very easy to follow other blogs, although not so easy, always to find individual users or blogs as one might wish. Like most social networks, users do a lot of carping on the site about how it does or does not work, changes and so on.
EMarketer speculates that as more marketers join the site and figure out how to use it best, it is poised to become a major player in the social space, which some would argue, it already is.
We enjoy Tumblr, which makes it easy to scroll through many blog posts from a huge variety of sources in a minimum of time, stopping where interest clicks. We’re not sure how good it will be as a marketing vehicle, but it provides a way to reach a substantially young audience with the right type of dynamic, visually oriented content.
It’s uniquely effective for visuals, from photographs to inforgraphics. –Allan Maurer
If you’re an enterprise or non-profit focused on social good, Ventureneer, a company that provides entrepreneurial training and advice to values-driven small business owners, social entrepreneurs, and nonprofit leaders, has released a list of the Top 25 Social Media for Social Good Blogs.
Rankings were based on readability, relevance to social good, and value of social media information given.
“To get started in social media, you read what’s out there, what others are doing. The list is a short-cut to good information, specific to social good,” said Geri Stengel, founder of Ventureneer.
The riches of social media as outreach, advocacy, and marketing tools are just beginning to be tapped by nonprofits and social enterprises, Stengel said. Following the blogs on Ventureneer’s Top 25 list will inspire organizations with the power of social media as well as provide practical tips on using them.
Recent studies show 61 percent of all small businesses now use social media to help identify and attract new customers. 75 percent have a company page on a social networking site, according to Social Media Today.
“Running a social business requires a fundamental change in the way businesses think as well as rethinking the tools that they use everyday to run socially interactive customer databases. Interaction with customers and partners are key to a successful implementation of this new change,” says CEO and founder of PerfectMIND.com, Farid Dordar.
PerfectMIND offers the following tips on how to make the change to better meet customer needs as well as their own marketing objectives:
•Allow others to contribute to your business content and blog
Creating conversation, educating customers about the benefit of your products and services, and writing relevant content is not only time consuming but also requires expertise that you might not have. Allowing your best customers to contribute to your website content not only makes your site more interactive but also more interesting for the new visitors.
•Let customer show off their purchases on your website
It is a part of the human psyche to mimic the practices of others, purchasing included. The busier you seem to be the more interesting you become for others to check you out. Let’s not forget that your deals become more powerful to your new visitors when they see how others are also interested in your newly created deal.
•Get customers to interact with you as well as your other customers
Allowing customers to ask questions, give tips or simply post a personal message not only gets your customers to interact with your business more often, but also gives new visitors confidence in your company, easing trust issues and encouraging them to make more purchases.
•Let customers to sell your products and services for cash rewards
Imagine having everyone promote and sell your products for you, instead of just a few sales people. Giving your customers incentives to refer, promote, or even sell your products is the new social way to increase sales. Allowing customers to see their rewards online is also an important factor to successfully implementing a reward program in your business.
In this video, Dordar adds some grittier details on the social media landscape:
WASHINGTON, DC – The Center for Regulatory Effectiveness (CRE), a regulatory watchdog, has petitioned the Federal Trade Commission to initiate a public process establishing a “trade regulation” for web-based services. Through the rulemaking, the FTC would clearly define acts or practices which they consider unacceptable.
Google, Facebook and Twitter have much in common. All three web-based service firms have pioneered or reinvented their primary area of expertise. All three companies are American businesses that have changed how the world uses the internet. All three companies act as platforms bringing together different sets of users. Of particular note, all three companies provide their primary services to consumers for free.
Also of note, all three firms are reported to be either under FTC investigation (Google and Twitter) or the subject of a petition to the FTC to be investigated (Facebook).
Any regulation by the FTC would need to comply with the statutory limitation on the Commission’s authority. By law, the FTC has authority to ban only acts or practices that cause or are likely to cause “substantial injury to consumers which is not reasonably avoidable by consumers themselves and not outweighed by countervailing benefits to consumers or to competition.”
In the absence of a rule for web-based services, the agency would lack a sound intellectual and legal framework for its work, creating the perception that the agency was interpreting ambiguous rules to obtain a preconceived solution.
HP will make more TouchPad's available at fire sale prices
Evan Carmichael at The Entrepreneur Blog, has selected what he calls “The top 50 Social Media blogs.”
“Social media is not just about setting up a page for your company on Facebook, or creating a personal profile on LinkedIn. Social media is reshaping business as usual, and determining new ways of reaching out to consumers that were never possible before,” he writes.
While we agree with most of his choices, which include the obvious choices (Mashable, ReadWriteWeb) as well as many less well known, our only real quibble is that the TechJournal should be on the list. Perhaps next year as we continue to evolve our editorial mix.
Still, we recommend taking a look at Carmichael’s picks. You may find a new source of information and insight.
HP will offer more TouchPads
HP was surprised by the demand for its marked down Touchpad tablet computer, which sold out its stock at $99. The company says it will run another batch off the assembly line and may even continue supporting the product. Here’s a report from Governement tech site GCN: gcn.com/articles/2011/09/01/hp-touchpad-frenzy-lessons-for-apple.aspx?s=gcndaily_020911
Microsoft sued for Phone 7 info collecting
A woman sued Microsoft this week in a district court in Seattle for allegedly tracking location info on Windows Phone 7 users without their consent or knowledge as part of its efforts to develop ad sales around the information, according to the complaint.
Responsys, Inc. (NASDAQ: MKTG), a provider of email and cross-channel marketing solutions, has found that retailers are more focused on using their email marketing programs to promote their social communities and less focused on email for social sharing in a its Viral & Community Links in Emails 2011 report.
Email marketing continues to be a key tactic for raising awareness of and driving traffic to retailers’ communities on Facebook, Twitter and other social media sites. Among the top online retailers tracked by the Retail Email Blog, 88% of them include community links in their promotional emails, up from 75% in 2010, approaching near universal adoption.
“This report is a strong endorsement of email’s ability to raise awareness of and drive traffic to brands’ social media pages on an ongoing basis,” said Ed Henrich, Senior Vice President of Professional Services at Responsys. “It’s also further evidence that cross-channel integration is increasingly vital to future marketing success.”
Facebook and Twitter dominate retailers’ community efforts, although YouTube has grown to become a strong third-place contender. Every retailer in the study linked to Facebook from their emails; 84% linked to Twitter; and 29% linked to YouTube.
However, fewer retailers are including share-with-your-network (SWYN) links in their emails, instead relying on their websites to spur social sharing. The percentage of retailers that include a SWYN link in every promotional email dropped to 25% from 26% in 2010 after rising from 12% in 2009.
“Three times as many retailers include share-with-your-network (SWYN) links on their product pages as regularly as they include them in their emails,” said Chad White, Research Director at Responsys and author of the Viral & Community Links in Emails 2011 report. “That’s a strong indication that retailers are sold on the benefits of SWYN, but that placement further down the sales funnel is more effective in general.”
Meanwhile, forward-to-a-friend (FTAF) usage continues its long-term decline, dropping to 41% from 44% in 2010 and 48% in 2009. Overall, 52% of retailers now include some viral mechanism — either SWYN or FTAF — in their emails, down from 56% in 2010.
The popular blogging service Tumblr, which hosts more than 27 million blogs, many of them photo or graphically oriented, is about to close on a funding round of from $75 million ot $100 million, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The WSJ pegs the company’s valuation at $800 million, which may not rock the Facebooks and Groupons if the world, but does show that companies can attract significant funding without making money if they have large enough audiences.
Tumblr raised $30 million in 2010 from Sequoia Capital, Union Square Ventures and Spark Capital and a total of about $40.2 million. Teh WSJ says Graylock Partners, an investor in Facebook and Groupon, as an investor in the new funding round.
The service has exploded in popularity this year. Tumblr, which employs 50, had 13.4 million unique visitors in July, up from 6.7 million in December, according to digital measurement service comScore.
We just started using Tumblr recently. About 20 percent of Tumblr blogs are fashion oriented and it include numerous other visually focused blogs, including those of porn starts and amateur nude models.
It has features that can make it addicting: you scroll easily through the blogs you follow with a mouse wheel and it’s very easy to reblog posts. You can “track” subjects such as film, technology, or Game of Thrones, say, and scroll through all the posts on that topic. It only takes a click on a blog’s “follow” button to start receiving its posts. Posting is also a quite painless endeavor.
All in all, we find it pretty easy to kill a couple hours scrolling through Tumblr blog posts.
Text posts do not seem to draw the attention or “notes” that visual blogs do, but we’ve found specific blogs and posts exposed us to stories, ideas and images we would have otherwise missed. We particularly like the “Future of Journalism Project” blog, which touches on many topics we cover here, such as social and digital media.
We’ve noticed people complain regularly about changes to the Tumblr service, to bloggers reposting items without attribution, and the other social media carping that we hear also about Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn (although less so about LinkedIn).
We suspect Tumblr is about to become the social network everyone talks about for a while. It’s not a Facebook/Twitter killer or a Google+ competitor so much as it may be competition for Blogger and to some lesser extent to WordPress. — Allan Maurer
Moms as a group and women generally rely on first person recommendations and they love to hear from someone with new experiences. That’s why they took to the rise of the easy-to-use platforms such as blogs and social media that allow word-of-mouth to spread at lightening speed, says Stacy DeBroff, CEO and founder of Boston-based Mom Central.
DeBroff is a key figure in the mommy blog revolution affecting brands large and small that sell to women and families. DeBroff’s Mom Central works with about 200 brands a year to reach moms and through them kids and families.
“They not only control the majority of the spend in a family household, they’ve expanded their footprint.” Once, DeBroff points out, moms didn’t make decisions about certain items such as cell phones, cars and appliances. “But now they’re the ones getting the cell phones, booking travel, and making what were once male-dominated purchases. They control 90 percent of the household spend.”
Social media and the digital world of instant communication and viral memes that go global overnight has affected the once staid advertising strategies of brands such as Proctor & Gamble, among others. “Money has shifted from the traditional advertising to this realm of creating enthusiasts and igniting them,” DeBroff says.
What do moms want from brands?
“Moms don’t want brands to summon them, they want conversations,” says DeBroff. “They want businesses to interact with them. They want an opportunity to experience products.”
There are five million mommy bloggers out there now, DeBroff notes and the cadre is growing. They write in the first person about why they like a new cell phone or a movie they saw. Brands want to engage them as ambassadors.
DeBroff’s firm focuses on finding mom influencers, who have considerable reach and can affect a brand’s bottom line because of their numerous platforms can provide feedback, awareness of a new product and affect sales.
It works because other moms like to hear from people who have actually experience the products and have something relevant to say. “They trust it so much more coming from other moms than from brands or celebrity endorsements.”
DeBroff says that successful mommy bloggers are transparent about anything they get for free, whether it is a book or samples. If they write copy that sounds like a brand message or advertorial, their readers tune it out and the blogger will lose influence and traffic, DeBroff says. “So reveal your connection with a company if you are a client, ambassador, or received something,” which she adds, is necessary to meet Federal Communications Commission guidelines.
Mom Central offers smart household and parenting solutions via its blogs and articles. It recently expanded and added Dad Central.
For some of DeBroff’s advice to brands trying to reach moms, see:
Americans embrace social media, despite all of their complaining about privacy, site graphics, and assorted other aspects of interacting with Facebook,Twitter, Google+ and other services. They like TV and like others to know it, they love sharing, giving advice and interacting with brands. Here’s an infographic from social media strategy firm Hasai that shows not only what we do on social media, but provides insight on who we are.
To prove his point, Jason highlights a number of Google+ features that beat Facebook’s — features like “Forced categorization of contacts” and “Chrome Browser and Chrome Store integration” and “Android integration.”
And with more than 200 million deeply invested Gmail users, Google would seem to have a powerful launch pad.
So if Google+’s technology is brilliant, its userbase is deep, Facebook’s functionality is flawed and all the pundits are convinced Google will romp, why am I confident that Google+ will fail to beat Facebook?
Because in their Google worship and/or their focus on comparing features, the pundits are forgetting tried and true axioms about how humans adopt technology, axioms documented decades ago by tech visionaries like Gordon Moore and Clayton Christensen. Here’s my rundown.
1) Even the best carpenter can’t build a tree. Though Google+ is an elegant piece of engineering, it’s not a social network. Jason and Jeff love Google’s technical innovations. Sure, normal technology thrives because of technical brilliance, design beauty and marketing megatonnage. But social networks are affected only marginally by those factors.
Instead, in social networks, the users are the product. Users’ habits and passions and commitments to each other are the life-force that makes a social network grow. Just as you can’t build a tree from a bunch of boards, you never could have constructed Facebook or Twitter or eBay or LinkedIn or Wikipedia top-down with a bunch of prefab components.
Launching with one hundred million users or a $100 million marketing budget would have more likely killed those sites, not grown them. (One advantage Google WILL have, at least initially, is fewer bimbots than Facebook.)
2) Wrong launch users. Passionate persistent users, not brilliant designers or programmers or professional commentators, build social networks. Google+ is launching with a diffuse cloud of alpha-tester geekerati who view Google+ as a feature set to be explored, tested and rated. Having the attention span and loyalty of fleas, this jittery crowd will migrate onward within weeks to the next hot-smelling technology that swaggers into view.
Beyond sharing a common identity as “early adopters,” members of this crowd don’t (usually) care deeply about each other or share a common passion beyond a burning desire be first in using a technology. They’re users, not community members.
Google’s diffuse-by-invites strategy works fine for a tool like Gmail, which is evaluated purely as a feature set, but it won’t work for Google+. Evidence: my friend Dan Gilmore, who as an innovator and former reporter for San Jose Mercury News should have more Google+ connections than anybody, went onto Facebook to look for friends who might also be using Google+. With no luck.
It doesn’t matter to you if 1 million or even 100 million people are using a social network, if only one of your 20 key colleagues and friends are using it. With social networks, it takes at least three to tango.
3) Diffuse launch path. Social networks can ONLY start small and tight with a set of enmeshed users, then percolate slowly outward. Facebook started in a Harvard dorm, then spread across Harvard, then to Stanford, Columbia and Yale. Then other Ivy League schools. Then colleges across the US. Then high schools. Then Microsoft and Apple. Only then, 30 months after launch, was Facebook opened up to everyone.
Comparison with Twitter
Likewise, Twitter started with messages between Biz Stone, Ev Williams and Jack Dorsey and their friends in San Francisco in March of 2003. It percolated there for a year, before expanding in March of 2007 into the tightly networked SXSW crowd, folks who were hungery for a way to recreate and sustain their SXSW friendships when they left Austin. That crowd, in turn, evangelized to their social network savvy friends at businesses across the US.
For both Facebook and Twitter, initial users were tightly networked. There was a strong sense of clubbiness among community members through a long initial phase. Those members’ loyalty to the club withstood even repeated outages (on the part of Twitter) and privacy concerns (on the part of Facebook) that would have doomed a normal technology product.
4) Noisy feedback loops. One of the key reasons that launching big is fatal to social networks is because the feedback loop from users to designers to users to progammers to management to newbs to old-timers to programmers gets cluttered with noise. When a tool launches big, its designers end up trying to build a feature set that satisfies all communities — or their own peculiar whims. Most users end up with a luke-warm affection for the service. There’s no ‘sponsor’ community to advocate change or evangelize.
MIT professor Eric Von Hippel has amply documented the importance of users in driving innovation in technology domains as diverse as thermoplastics, semi-conductors and scientific instruments. Is there any doubt that user innovation would be even more crucial in shaping social networks, where the user and the product are so closely entwined, functioning as two ends of the same biocyber synapse?
Rather than launching big and broad, far better to build a “small” tool for one passionate community. Once the kinks get worked out, this template of technology and usage patterns later gets adopted/adapted by other adjacent communities. Using this approach, people like to feel they’re in a human-sized space in which their actions matter, in which their feedback into the system gets processed and used. (Gordon Moore’s bookCrossing the Chasm is awesome about this process.)
(It’s worth noting that Robert Scoble thinks Google+ is just for geeks and will survive by serving that market alone. I think geeks don’t just want to socialize with geeks… for long.)
5) Professional managers. Successful social networks evolve over time, often blossoming out of series of random, non-linear, unpredictable connections and chemistry. In retrospect, the winner’s strategy looks obvious (read Duncan Watts’ book!), but at any given moment, it is impossible to determine what feature set or user base will drive the coming decade’s NEXT dominant social network.
Professional managers, particularly of software projects, can’t tolerate this kind of nonlinear growth. In his post about Google+, Jason notes that he wrongly predicted huge success for Wave, Google’s previous attempt at social software launched with great fanfare two years ago, because Google ultimately stopped devoting resources to Wave. Why should things be different this time?
Google is a big public company that needs high-profile successes not meandering muddles that may eventually pay off. This means Google will likely give up on Google+ before it can take root, just like it killed Wave. Clayton Christensen’s brillian bookInnovator’s Dilemma gives the playbook.
6) No culture. Starting big and broad also kills the chance for a social network to develop a distinctive culture. This is crucial because a great social network is known by its culture, its lingo, its behaviors, its taboos, its history. Some examples:
Overwhelmed by the volume of information flowing from Twitter, Tweeters (not Twitter) created hashtags to keep track of ideas.
Back in 2004, the liberal blog DailyKos was playing a key role in narrating and steering the Democratic party’s primaries. The site was getting lots of favorable press, and I asked Markos Moulitsas, the community’s creator and curator, whether this attention was having a big positive impact on the community. On the contrary, Markos replied. Every time there was big press about the site, the community would flood with new users who didn’t get the site’s culture.
Traffic would spike briefly, but interaction quality would plummet. A big gush of new members busted the site’s chemistry. Then DailyKos would shrink back to its previuos size and start growing organically again. Since then, the Kos community’s richness has spawned its own yearly convention.
(Another example of Kossite culture: to this day, a novel ad campaign can’t run on DailyKos without invoking communal cries of “pie fight,” an insider reference to an infamous, bodacious 2005 ad campaign by Turner Broadcast for a Gilligan’s Island reality show.)
For another example of how growth can kill a social network’s culture, look no further than the Q&A community Quora‘s explosion/implosion early this year. Once a steadily growing service, rich with VC and tech insiders, Quora suddenly went viral in January. New users flooded into the service and quality of interactions plummeted. Despite lots of agonizing over how to sustain the growth, http://quorareview.com/2011/01/27/evolving-quoras-design-for-growth/ the site has fallen back to earth.
In contrast, the Q&A service Stackoverflow, which is tightly focused on serving specific communities and growing organically for the last three years , has overtaken Quora. Notice in the Google trends graph for the two services that Quora has gotten a huge amount of press (bottom trend box), but Stackoverflow is now far bigger.
Am I a Luddite or Google-hater? Judge for yourself. I started tweeting in March of ’07. I was LinkedIn’s 4,154th user. I even own a few Google shares — their ad business is a money-printing machine.
Summing up: Google’s great at carpentry. Gardening, not so much.
Henry Copeland is founder and CEO of Blogads.com. Reprinted by permission from: www.blogads.com
More U.S. Federal agencies are joining Tumblr, the free blogging and social networking service, according to Federal Computer Week. It says the General Services Administration was the first to tumble. Now, the Peace Corp., the State Department and the National Archives have also joined the increasingly popular blogging platform.
We recently tried it out ourselves. Tumblr is extremely easy to use, share posts by others you follow or post photos, videos, audio or text. It’s also a lot of fun for casual browsing. It or its users may eventually face some copyright violation problems similar to those YouTube deals with, but since almost everything comes from the Web and sources are generally acknowledged, much of it may be deemed fair use.
The GSA jumped aboard in March with its USA.gov blog on the Tumblr platform. It offers news and tips from various federal agencies.
The National Archives is using the Tumblr blog to present images from its collections, such as old maps, photos and illustrations. Most of the Tumblr blogs are visually oriented.
Going by our own experience with the Tumblr platform, we suspect it will just continue to gain popularity. Businesses that use it properly may also find it effective, but as one Tumblr exec has pointed out, agencies or businesses or organizations will need to monitor and respond to feedback, not just post their own items. Social media experts who attend TechMedia’s annual Internet focused conferences (next is Digital East in Tysons Corner, VA in September) say again and again that listening is essential and as important as pushing out fresh content.
Some agencies may be wary of the Tumblr platform because of the ease of commenting and interacting. The FCW article notes that many agencies are using another blogging platform, WordPress, which is what TechJournal South uses.