Posts tagged social media
Before you pay to use Twitter, ask yourself if it’s worth it
Nov 27th
A new report say that the majority of companies are planning to increase their spend on social media activities next year, but will it be worth it?
The Social Media and Online PR Report from Consultancy reveals that fewer than a quarter of companies are able to see a ‘tangible’ return on their investments, while just under two thirds had gained ‘more benefit’ from their spend ‘but nothing concrete’.
However, companies that have concentrated spend on social media have seen a return on investment with more than half of all firms that had made a significant effort saying that they had seen return.
Some 90 per cent of respondents said that social media is taking up more time than it did a year ago, while 86 per cent are planning to increase their budgets next year.
But you can’t ignore the recent comScore figures about users declining. Recent figures have shown that the number of users on Twitter has actually declined in the past three months, with growth down by 8.1 per cent.
Are users simply over the hype of Twitter?
Twitter launched in March 2006, two years after the social network that started them all, Facebook, which launched in March 2004. It’s taken almost three years, but the site now has more than 92 million users worldwide.
To put that in perspective, radio took 38 years to reach just half the amount of current Twitter users – 50 million. TV took 13 years and the internet, four.
Social networking isn’t just a fad, it is fundamentally changing the way we communicate, as we discovered at our Social Media roundtable earlier this year.
A number of major advertisers and brands have used Twitter as a way of communicating directly with their customers, but not only are new users down, Nielsen data reveals that traffic to Twitter was down 27 per cent during September and October. That means less eyeballs seeing your tweets! And yet, co-founder Biz Stone announced this week that the site will be launching paid accounts next year.
The site is also considering signing further deals with companies to licence its content and live streams, just as it did recently with Yahoo, Google and Microsoft’s Bing, that will see your tweets in search results. But it also means that your tweets will have to spot on, full of key words and be engaging. Is this too hard to achieve for brands in just 140 characters?
As it is, only 10 per cent of Twitter users accounted for 90 per cent of all tweets as of May 2009. A study from Harvard Business School confirms that the typical Twitter user tweets “very rarely”, while the average number of tweets per user over a lifetime is just one. People are losing interest and brands and advertisers are failing to ‘tweet’ about anything compelling.
A report last week said that users on were tech-savvy and usually work in the media and marketing industry.
And surprise surprise, the brands they are talking about the most include Google, Apple and Amazon followed by a mix of tech companies and other strong global brands like Starbucks, Disney and HP.
But one of the biggest complaints made by Twitter users about brands on the site was that tweets need to be “more human”.
Using Twitter to promote brands just got harder. And while tweet may direct users to your website or attract them to deals or even just engage with your consumer, one must wonder if there is any real future in this micro-blogging site. Has the hype ended? Or has it just begun?
Twitter seems hell-bent on making next year it’s revenue year. But despite all the media attention, many are wondering what the future holds for Twitter and marketers will soon wonder if Twitter is worth the investment, especially when it competes alongside so many other social media sites that are yet to lose users or suffer declines.
How to create and tailor your next ad simply by listening in…
Nov 23rd
A number of big brand advertisers and marketers and experiment with developing ad campaigns based on what consumers are talking about on the web.
Monitoring what internet users say in their instant messages, social networks and blogs isn’t anything new, of course. There has been many a study telling us what the most popular brands discussed on the internet is (Apple’s iPhone, Vegemite, Starbucks and Microsoft just to name a few).
But now, marketers are using new technologies to scan the web for key words to find out what consumers are—and aren’t—saying about their brands, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Marketers can then incorporate those findings into their more-conventional research to create specific text and photos for their ads given what consumers seem to want – or, what they say they want, at least.
Furthermore, once the campaigns are up and running, advertisers are using the same web-scanning technologies to gauge consumer reaction to their messages, and to fine-tune them.
Marketers have long drawn on information from the web to help them design their web sites and online marketing campaigns.
Now, more of them have begun to use it to guide their marketing across a range of media, including print and TV, and in choosing the overall strategy for those campaigns.
Digital marketing and advances in the technologies available to marketers and advertisers don’t just mean more channels to advertise – they mean more channel to listen, too.
Jason Falls, a social media consultant and blogger on socialmediaexplorer.com, said that it is “imperative” that companies and brands can gauge public opinion about them by listening in to online conversations.
He added that companies could also then interject in these discussions and that while marketers may not have control over the conversations, they should at least have a participatory role in them.
Services such as Google Alerts and searches on Twitter, Google Blogs and Bing can allow companies to keep track of conversations about their company.
According to recent research from Harris Interactive and Tealeaf, more adults are turning to social media to talk about problems they have had with brands and companies.
Here are some sites to help you:
and the old favourite, Google Alerts
LinkedIn and Twitter go together like peanut butter and chocolate, says Stone
Nov 11th
Business and professional networking site LinkedIn has linked with Twitter in a partnership that will allow the two to cross-file to each other’s services by checking a box on either site.
Allen Blue, a co-founder of Twitter who is its vice president of product strategy, said LinkedIn members would be able to automatically repost recent Twitter messages if they wanted.
When LinkedIn users set their status on LinkedIn, they can now tweet it as well, amplifying it to all of their followers and real-time search services like Twitter Search and Bing. And when users tweet, they can send that message to their LinkedIn connections as well, from any Twitter service or tool.
LinkedIn members can also chose to post certain tweets on their LinkedIn profiles, so an executive can separate tweets about lunch from important product announcements.
Blue added that users will have the option of sending only selected materials to Twitter.
In addition to the obvious advantage of increasing the audience for either tweets or LinkedIn information there were two other advantages to the new system.
Twitter “wants to take advantage of the strong identity in LinkedIn to make those professional tweeters more successful”.
LinkedIn and Twitter said they would roll out the new services “gradually over the next couple of days.”
In an online video with LinkedIn chairman and co-founder Reid Hoffman, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone said the partnership was like “bringing peanut butter and the chocolate together to make the perfect combination.”
But more than just creating a virtual Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup, the deal hints at Twitter’s future business strategy, especially with more companies discovering how social networking is evolving into an important communications link for employees and customers.
“It is the integration of the business side of the tweets and Twitter with the business ecosystem of LinkedIn that make the two work together,” Hoffman said in the video.
“The business use case of Twitter is turning out to be very important,” Stone said. He also spoke about “putting a little Twitter in everything.”
Facebook undergoes another makeover. Will it help you?
Oct 26th
Facebook has undergone yet another homepage makeover. Last Friday the social networking site quietly rolled out some fairly significant changes to the way information is displayed on a users’ homepage.
The updates make the default feed more like it was before the last major homepage overhaul, but as usual the changes aren’t without some issues, and they have sparked more backlash among the Facebook community.
When Facebook changed the homepage earlier this year, it went to a more Twitter-like feed of real-time status updates. Basically, every status update from your network of friends is displayed in as it is entered without any filtering.
The new Facebook homepage News Feed brings relevance back to the main feed. Rather than displaying everything from everyone, the News Feed uses a Facebook magic algorithm to display only the posts and status updates that your network is interested in. The more likes, comments or interactions a post within your network has, the more likely it will appear within your News Feed.
Robert Scoble, a technology evangelist and social networking guru, described the change on his blog “This makes Facebook much more useful because you only see the items that your friends have found important enough to comment on or “touch” in some way. Overnight my news feed went from something that looked pretty cold and lame to something that has tons of ‘warmth.’”
Be a leader not a follower on Twitter
Oct 22nd
You may have heard about big brands and advertisers employing staff to create social media strategies and I can see the value in that.
However, I don’t see why the FBI needs to be telling the world about itself in 140 characters or less.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has an update on its feed this morning about an arrest it has made.
I have come to know Twitter as a ‘social network’ for the media and journalists. I see little value in it for individuals. I have all the major news services I follow in my feed, as well as industry commentators, press officers, some brands (just to see when they release new products and advertising) and a few celebrities (for fun). But do I have any actually ‘friends’ on there? Well no.
It seems to me that a lot of people and brands and organizations are on Twitter for the sake of it. There are some that I’m following that haven’t posted any updates since July. So what’s the point of being in a space you don’t use, let alone reach your actually advocates and consumers?
I think if you are going to be on Twitter, research who else is one there and really think about who you follow. If people want to follow you, for whatever reason, give them a reason to check in with you everyday.
Be compelling. I recently started following a lot more brands as I realised I probably hadn’t been making enough effort with the network.
Out of about 30 new brands I started following, only one wrote to me and said “thanks for following us” and then made me a list of promises. I will now be checking in with them throughout the working day. They made me feel like Twitter was worthwhile and they are obviously using it for all of its benefits and not just because, well, “everyone else is doing it”.

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