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">Pining For Pinterest

27 Mar

Who doesn’t like to look at pretty things? Images that make you think? Quotes to inspire you? From mouth-watering recipes to the workout that whittles your figure into shape to wear your fashion fantasies, America is pinning. If social media were to have an “It” girl, in 2012, her name would be Pinterest. The site has seen tremendous growth in the past few months and pinning has caught on like wildfire, as users create visual boards containing their interests, desires, inspiration and personal expressions.

 

All this pinning caught the attention of Facebook, who integrated Pinterest when they rolled out the Open Graph last week. The Pinterest app was one of the first 60 apps available to users. As consumers’ engagement with Pinterest has grown, brands are beginning to swarm to the site. There is no ROI, or measurement system for Pinterest yet, but any social media marketer is going to take note of the potential to reach customers. Brands are heading to Pinterest as if it is a Gold Rush in the digital landscape.

Are you pining to learn more about Pinterest? We thought so! Sociality Squared CEO, Helen Todd will be presenting “Pining Over Pinterest” at Social Media Week – New York.

“Pinterest is THE emerging platform that’s going to steal the show for 2012. It’s simple, visually compelling…and best of all: it has clear business benefits that are tangible. Well, almost tangible. Brands already taking advantage of Pinterest are seeing increased traffic to their websites as one of the many benefits from this platform. Best practices and case studies are being created now, but YOU can stay ahead of the curve by attending this event that will explore what Pinterest is, current case studies and why you should be using it if you aren’t already.”

The event will be held on Thursday, February 16 from 6:30 PM – 8:00 PM at Definition 6; Sociality Squared and Definition 6  are hosting. You can find the event details here http://socialmediaweek.org/event/?event_id=1422. Due to the speaker and the subject’s popularity, the event is sold out. If you aren’t one of the lucky attendees, we look forward to seeing you there! We will be posting Helen’s presentation on the blog following Social Media Week.

 

More information related to this article can be found here:

http://mashable.com/2012/01/09/the-top-brands-on-pinterest/

http://adage.com/article/digitalnext/real-simple-pinterest-drives-traffic-facebook/231576/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+adage%2Fcomplete+%28Advertising+Age+-+Complete+Feed%29

http://socialmediaweek.org/event/?event_id=1422

Post written by Tia Marie Kemp aka @TiaMarieKemp. To learn more from fbadz.com, become a fan!

Infuse Your Timeline With Apps

20 Jan

The Open Graph became available this week as Facebook unveiled the “the next generation of the platform which enables people to tell their stories through the apps they use” on Wednesday evening. Spotify and Washington Post Social Reader have seen a lot of usage prior to user’s profiles being converted to Timeline. Now that Timeline is integrated on the platform, Facebook kept their promise on by releasing the Open Graph with over 60 apps to kick things off on Wednesday night. Watch the Apps introductory video here.

 

Apps give users the opportunity to express their personalities through apps they are connected with on Facebook. Whether it’s cooking, movies, fashion or travel, there is an app. Or if there’s not yet, there will be one soon. In fact, if there isn’t an app for an activity you enjoy, you have the option to create one and integrate it with the Open Graph for use on Facebook. The apps introduced Wednesday are just the beginning of a movement that is bound to be big, as more and more people use Facebook (active users are projected to cross the 1 billion mark this summer).

 

Now that Facebook has made it even more simple for users to tell their story by infusing Timeline with better photo tools, life events and now by providing apps to share the things they enjoy most, businesses who are already social can be amplified, and those who aren’t are going to need to become so to stay competitive in this quickly changing media landscape. The Open Graph apps integration will keep marketers and developers extremely busy as businesses adapt their social media plans accordingly. Pinterest is a great example. The virtual pinboard site is no longer just adored by the design and DIY crowds, but has become the darling of the social media sites and will only continue to grow with this new Facebook integration. Brands are flocking to Pinterest as they realize the reach they will have is not only on the site itself, but also on the biggest social network of them all.

Timeline will become richer as the release of Open Graph expands opportunities for simply sharing life.

 

More information related to this article can be found here:

https://blog.facebook.com/blog.php?post=10150469721182131

https://developers.facebook.com/blog/post/634/

https://www.facebook.com/about/timeline/apps

 

Post written by Tia Marie Kemp aka @TiaMarieKemp. To learn more from fbadz.com, become a fan!

Top Facebook Moments of 2011 – Part 2

6 Jan

Every time I receive notification of a post in Benny’s Surf Club of Awesomeness, I get a little homesick for the West Coast. My friend, who lives in San Diego, started this group nearly a year ago. It’s a really active, fun group of people who love life, the beach and surfing. How can I not feel a tinge of longing as I am notified of their posts about group BBQs and surf excursions during the frigid months of the East Coast winter? A year or so ago, I would have joined a group and not really followed what was going on. Thanks to the group improvements in 2011, I am now fully aware of what I am missing out on.

Improvements to Groups was just one of the upgrades Facebook made in 2011. In continuing our Top Facebook Moments of 2011 (read Part 1 here), let’s round out the list with several of the changes implemented in conjunction with f8 this year.

Groups
As my personal experience illustrates, unless we were checking in on them constantly, we didn’t have as much of an opportunity to be envious of group activities taking place in Facebook groups of the past. Groups were not as integrated into the home page and users had to make more of an effort to find out about current events. As more “personal” social networks popped into the picture in 2011 ( Google+  and Path), Facebook tailored Groups to better fit the user experience. Facebook’s new product manager, Paul Adams, had been advocating that our online networks should align with our offline networks since he worked at Google . His research keeps Facebook competitive as technology evolves with the user’s experience. The Groups improvements include:

  • Groups now have a Wall that summarizes all the recent activities of people within the group and a Publisher that enables members to share content
  • Group activities will now be delivered to your News Feed
  • Interacting with Groups will become easier since you can follow the links to the content directly from the News Feed stories or make comments on these stories directly from your home page

 Like Button Extension

Changes to the Open Graph related to the Like button were announced at f8 2011. These adjustments made the Like button more relevant to the apps users interact with. Facebook simultaneously launched partnerships with media companies such as Spotify and Netflix to give users the ability to publish activity to their News Feeds, resulting in more sharing capability, as friends will see what media you consume as you click Watched, Listened to and Read.

This addition introduces new permission and privacy issues: “Previously, users had both grant an app initial permissions upon install and fill out a sharing prompt every time they wanted to publish something to Facebook. Now, users will grant a new type of permission that allows an app the ability to instantly publish activity without showing a prompt.”

These app interactions are bringing about enormous opportunities for social media marketers who are now able to target users according to their interaction with content to tailor Facebook ads.

Mobile
Over 350 million active users currently access Facebook through their mobile devices. With the exponential increase of smart phone users, online experiences are rapidly being converted to mobile apps. Savvy businesses know how important mobile is for their online enterprises, and Facebook provided a vehicle for mobile as it increased its mobile functionality this year. Facebook kept good pace this year with announcements around Facebook Messenger and their highly-anticipated iPad app. Facebook Messenger was adorned with the following features https://www.facebook.com/help/?faq=132470183510042:

  • Swift messaging: one-click access to messages through your phone; messages update in real time
  • Message friends one-on-one or start a group conversation with friends on Facebook or, if you’re using the app on an iPhone or Android, anyone in your mobile contacts
  • Location mapping lets you see where the people in your conversation are, so it’s easy to meet up on the go
  • Messenger is integrated with your Facebook messages and chats, so you can access all your conversations right in the app
  • Ability to personalize and organize your messages by naming and choose a picture for your group conversations

As more and more users employ iPads for business and entertainment, the need for a new interface was eminent. iPad received it’s own app in October.  Some highlights of the app include:

  • A fun hands-on navigation approach
  • Easy access to games, apps, friend lists and messages
  • Chat, games and other features
  • Bigger better photos; ability to take photos with the iPad itself

Offering users the opportunity to treat an iPad like a photo album, flipping through big, gorgeous pictures is right inline with another Facebook upgrade: the change in photo view and size.

Photos
Story telling has become a remarkable branding tool. Devising the most creative, engaging brand stories often time takes adding a few compelling images. In preparation of the launch of the Timeline, which utilizes visuals to a greater extent than the previous user profiles, they upgraded the photo-sharing tool.

We examined the refined photo tool in our post A Picture Is Worth A Thousand Words: According to the Facebook Blog, the photo sharing tool has been upgraded with an accelerated uploading capability and larger images (720 pixels to 960 pixels), giving users quicker access to more refined pictures. The viewer has also been redesigned to make images pop. This is wonderful news for users and marketers alike. To say photo sharing has skyrocketed in the past few years would be an understatement. Marketers would be wise to be mindful of the magnified role visual content is now playing on Facebook and its associated apps (Instagram recently upgraded their app with the ability to upload full-size photos to Facebook).

Honorary Mentions

Subscribe Button
The subscribe button can be likened to following someone on Twitter, however, if you are a business it helps you gain more audience and potential customers while still keeping your personal profile. We’ll see how it evolves this year.

Deals
Facebook deals are designed to help businesses connect with loyal customers, while giving them the benefit of social distribution, as stories about the deal are published to users profiles when they are redeemed. There are currently four types of deals (individual, friend, loyalty and charity); performance has been excellent for small businesses.

New Messages
The old Facebook messages were a little clunky, so it was newsworthy when we welcomed the refined Message format this year. Upgraded features include the ability to:

  • View your messages, chats, and texts in one single location
  • View related conversations with a contact in one single conversation thread
  • Demarcate email messages from sources other than your friends in a separate folder
  • Attach Office documents such as Word Excel and PowerPoint
  • View Office documents such as Word Excel and PowerPoint

 

More information related to this article can be found here:

http://www.allfacebook.com/facebook-upgrades-2011-12

Post written by Tia Marie Kemp aka @TiaMarieKemp. To learn more from fbadz.com, become a fan!

 

Top Facebook Moments of 2011 – Part 1

30 Dec

The moment I found out Facebook would be testing the new Timeline in New Zealand, I immediately clicked over to my friend’s page. He lives in Auckland, and I was really, really curious to see how the Timeline worked on someone I have known for years. Several weeks later, when it was released to users in North America, I couldn’t WAIT to upgrade my own profile. The Timeline rocks!

A flood of status updates positively reviewing the Timeline has since illustrated that I’m not the only one who appreciated the upgrade, however, there has been diverse sentiment about many of the changes Facebook made this year. As we move toward the New Year, let’s recap some of Facebook’s greatest moments of 2011.

Timeline
The highlight of the year for the majority of users was the implementation of the new Timeline. Historically, users push back and struggle adjusting to the changes Facebook has made, but most people just rolled with this one, and have been delighted as it pops up on more and more profiles. The Timeline was announced in October at f8, so there was plenty of time to build anticipation around its debut. There were many creative presentations explaining it. One of my personal favorites was the video of Don Draper presenting the Timeline. Watch it here.

News Feed
The changes after f8 simplified and emphasized that ability to categorize your friends (a much needed improvement for the underutilized Lists feature). Following suit, the News Feed was also restructured into the main feed, taking up the majority of the space, and a new feature, the ticker, which was a smaller view of what is going on with all of your friends. This allowed more targeted content in your main feed, while the more superfluous news was filtered through the ticker.

GraphRank was introduced as a new component into EdgeRank, the algorithm that determines what shows up in users’ News Feeds. GraphRank takes into consideration edge signifiers generated from users’ activity that takes place outside of Facebook. This leads to more information competing for News Feed visibility. This move reinforces the “Content is King” slogan marketers have to adopt. Brand content has to be relevant and engaging for users to have a chance to appear in users’ News Feeds. This in turn helps the brands because users will interact more with the brand and its content, which ties in perfectly to our next greatest Facebook moment of 2011:

Sponsored Stories
Advertising on Facebook is evolving into something much more organic than when it first popped into the side of our News Feed a few years ago. Remember the ads that would ask for an explanation about why you didn’t like them when you tried to delete them? The Sponsored Stories are essentially word of mouth marketing which highlight user’s interactions with their favorite brands for all of their friends to see. The varieties of Sponsored Stories have increased in leaps and bounds this year and include:

1. Page Like Story

2. Page Post Like Story

3. App Used / Game Played Story

4. App Share Story

5. Check-in Story

6. Domain Share Story

A year from when they debuted, Sponsored Stories will be moving into the News Feed in January 2012. Users activity will ultimately decide if sponsored stories will stay in the News Feed (there’s a lot of speculation on their success).

Privacy
Facebook’s security technologies earned the nickname “Immune System” in the media this year. The system cleared out some of its most common digital maladies by implementing the following fixes:

  • Partnering with Web of Trust has enabled the site to identify and block posts that include insecure web addresses
  • A social verification system provides a means of recovering lost passwords through trusted friends
  • Log-in approvals send code to mobile devices so users can authenticate attempts to access accounts from unrecognized machines
  • Smart friend lists create groupings of contacts with things in common, all but forcing people’s hands to use this features for microsharing instead of publicly posting everything for all to see

Facebook also introduced Inline Privacy Controls by co-locating privacy controls near content sharing spaces on Facebook profiles, empowering people to take control over their own privacy. The options for what you share and who you share it with increased, and the process became more streamlined and user friendly.

Metrics
The Talking About This metric was introduced. This new page insight was visible for all to see and provides information about how engaging a page is with a quick glance. Read all about it in our post People Are Talking About: Facebook’s New Metric.

Negative Feedback Metrics have been designed to measure negative feedback gleaned from page posts that have matriculated through the News Feed. This metric will be potentially huge as it is refined in the coming year, and content continues to be imperative to a page’s success on Facebook.

Credits Incentives
Credits became mandatory for all applications that request payment in exchange for premium content in 2011. The following devices were implemented for developers to facilitate more income:

  • Get balance – shows individual users’ balances to developers
  • Buy with friends – which encourages people to recommend purchases
  • Frictionless payments – which enables gamers or shoppers to pay for goods without leaving the application

800 Million Users

This fall, Facebook announced that they had reached 800 million users (counted as users that had logged in during the past 30 days). Hitting this milestone was a reminder of the exponential reach available to companies who use Facebook for business, and a relevant Conference opening stat as the new updates were announced during f8.

Stay tuned for Part 2 of our Top Facebook Moments of 2011!

 

More information related to this article can be found here:

http://www.allfacebook.com/facebook-upgrades-2011-12

Post written by Tia Marie Kemp aka @TiaMarieKemp. To learn more from fbadz.com, become a fan!

 


“Should I Buy That?” – How Social Media Influences Buying Behavior

22 Dec

Remember friendship bracelets? Those colorful, woven (sometimes knotted) bracelets we used to make for our friends in elementary school?

I had forgotten about them until this season of giving, when I’m on alert for gift ideas. A beautiful image caught my eye in my Facebook News Feed one afternoon. I clicked to my friend’s page, where she had posted a link to an Etsy seller who makes friendship bracelets made of swarovski crystal beads. A sudden flood of fun memories came to mind as I reminisced about exchanging the bright bracelets with my best friends in school. VOILA! What a great gift idea for my girl friends!

The Buying Decision Process

Taking into consideration a traditional look of what influences purchase decisions, companies now have a greater opportunity than ever to influence what we buy leveraging social media platforms. The level of influence increases with the strength of their online communities and the strength of word of mouth marketing based on fans’ sharing content to their social graphs (friends recommending products to friends on social networking sites). The Buying Decision Process has five steps:

  1. Need Recognition
  2. Information Search
  3. Evaluation of Alternatives
  4. Purchase Decision
  5. Post Purchase Behavior

Need Recognition

In my case with the friendship bracelets I didn’t realize I “needed” the bracelets as Christmas gifts for my friends until I discovered the product in my News Feed on Facebook from another friend. This in and of itself illustrates a shift in need recognition from active searching on search engines like Google to passive discovery on social platforms like Facebook. It’s not the only way I rely on coming up with gift ideas, but having the endorsement of my friends for a product definitely helps me filter through gift ideas out of the many websites that recommend top gift ideas for the season – a trusted friend’s endorsement will almost always trump a commercial website’s recommendations (although if my friends have bad taste, I may look to review sites and bloggers who I trust for recommendations too as they still have third party credibility!).

Information Search and Evaluation of Alternatives

Once we realize we need something, the research begins. In my case, I realized I needed friendship bracelets. Historically, people turned to their family and network of friends to help make a buying decision. If you were looking for a fishing pole, you would ask your avid fly fisherman uncle for advice. If you wanted to buy the perfect red lipstick, you would visit your best friend who works in the cosmetics department at Nordstrom.

The key is that we ask people who have the knowledge to help us, and whom we trust. See our post, It’s That Time of Year: A Guide to Holiday Marketing on Facebook, for an example of how consumers reach out to their social networks for help with purchase decisions.

Millions of people now turn to online resources during the research and evaluation phases of the purchase decision process. The following online channels influence various purchases, from baby products, to sports equipment to electronics and yes, even to friendship bracelets:

  • Search Results
  • Brand Websites
  • News Articles
  • Product Review Sites
  • Online Advertisements
  • Forum Comments
  • Facebook
  • Blog Posts
  • YouTube
  • Foursquare
  • Twitter
  • And more

Savvy brands will have a presence on the social media channels most in line with their product and audience. This will ensure the necessary touch points are available during the research process and it will also ensure that content is available to be shared from one fan to that fans’ friends in turn further circulating the content beyond the initial streams the brand publishes to and has a presence on.

After the consumer has read a few blog posts, looked on the brand website and read some product reviews, the researcher may turn to their social networks to help them decide between a couple of different options, as was the case with the two baby dolls on our Guide to Holiday Marketing on Facebook.

Final Purchase Decision

There are many variables that go into the final purchase decision, however, a bigger bank of knowledge, specifically from people in your circle of trust, may have an even bigger influence than simply knowing the facts. I followed up with my sister about her baby doll purchase. Here is what she had to say:

Post Purchase Behavior 

The post purchase behavior can take many forms on social networking sites: reaffirming the purchase decision (sometimes to overcome buyer’s remorse) to part of the consumption experience. Tysha, my sister, frequently posts to her blog, and plans to post about this purchase after her daughter opens her gift. She may even upload a picture to the American Girl page on Facebook of her daughter with her new doll. She consistently shares her new blog posts to her Facebook page as well, so the purchase she made will be shared on a couple of different social channels as part of her full purchase experience.

In some cases, a purchase decision will be made and social platforms will be used to reaffirm the purchase. In this case, it may be more common for items bought for oneself than as gifts. For example if I spent a lot of money on say a new laptop, I would more than likely look to review sites even after I charged the credit card to make sure I made the right decision. I may even post the news on Facebook to have my friends comment and affirm that I bought the right laptop as well.

In Conclusion

Recommendations through social media have great reach and come from a trusted source when a brands’ fans are sharing content to their social graphs. Companies are thrilled when they generate this type of word of mouth marketing, as the recommendations have an exponential effect upon circle upon social circle in the News Feed- the company just needs to initiate the spark, be present for the conversation and allow the fans to spread their brand like wildfire online.

My experience with the friendship bracelets shows that sometimes you don’t even know what you “need” until it is right in front of your eyes. Mindful marketers will use social media to keep you engaged throughout the purchasing process.

More information related to this article can be found here:

http://www.socialquickstarter.com/content/103-10_facts_about_consumer_behavior_on_facebook

http://mashable.com/2011/10/25/social-consumer-sharing-infographic/

Post written by Tia Marie Kemp aka @TiaMarieKemp. To learn more from fbadz.com, become a fan!

Case Study: Leica Camera V-Lux 30 Camera Launch

16 Dec

Client:
Leica Camera
“Danny MacAskill Plays Capetown” Interactive Video Series
May 2011

Objective:

  • Build anticipation around the V-Lux 30 camera launch
  • Raise awareness of the brand to a new audience
  • Use an internet celebrity that has a large and dedicated community

Solution:
An Interactive Video Series featuring Danny MacAskill

Key Lessons:
The launch was a success for two reasons:

1. It engaged and enticed viewers with an interactive video series that built anticipation for the new product launch.
2. It leveraged the strong online following of an Internet celebrity  and therefore exposed the Leica brand to a new audience,     increasing the brand exposure and reach  outside of its core community.

Company Background
Leica Camera is a luxury brand used by prestigious photographers around the world. In 1925, Oskar Barnack developed a small format 35 mm camera that would revolutionize photography. His passion for photography and struggle with asthma led him to create the lightweight Leica camera. Since then, Leica has developed innovative instruments that afford a unique seeing experience, and has had a profound influence on our view of the world we live in.

Objective
Leica wanted to build anticipation around the launch of their new V-Lux 30 camera. The camera makes saving and sharing simple for those who love to explore the world. Leica Camera not only wanted to illustrate this but also wanted to use an Internet celebrity who had a large and dedicated community to raise awareness of the brand to a new audience.

The brand chose Danny MacAskill to be the face of the interactive campaign. Danny is professional street trial bicyclist for Inspired Bicycles Ltd. His Internet fame came by chance, when his flat mate posted a video of him doing stunts on YouTube. His videos that followed were extremely popular, attracting hundreds of thousands of views within a couple of days on the site.

The Scottish extreme sportsman would serve as the bridge to connect Leica Camera with a new community of adventurers plugged in to the digital world. Leica Camera came to Sociality Squared to determine how to best leverage an upcoming video shoot of the extreme athlete in Cape Town, South Africa, and how to leverage Danny MacAskill’s online community in a cohesive, cross-platform social media campaign.

Approach
The solution was an interactive video series “Danny MacAskill Plays Capetown”. Over 10 days leading up to the V-Lux 30 camera launch, three short video clips of Danny MacAskill riding and doing stunts through Cape Town were released. At the end of each video there was a cliffhanger and viewers were asked to vote on Danny’s next move. Questions included: “Where should he go next?” “How should he jump the containers?” and “How should he jump the empty pool?” The videos were uploaded on Vimeo and officially released with the voting mechanism on The Leica Camera Blog. As an incentive to vote, one participate for each voting period won the new V-Lux 30 Camera. The series was also promoted to Leica Camera’s communities on Facebook and Twitter. Fans enjoyed seeing Cape Town through the eyes of a street trials pro rider and voting on Danny’s next move for a chance to win the new mystery Leica Camera. At the conclusion of the video series, the V-Lux 30 was announced, and three lucky participants won new Leica product. The clips that the fans voted on were incorporated into the complete video, which Leica used as their official commercial for the product.

Results

  • Leica Camera was successful in meeting its objectives of  building anticipation around the V-Lux 30 camera launch, raising awareness of the brand to a new audience, and using an internet celebrity that has a large and dedicated community
  • The corporate website traffic increased 14% compared to the previous month, peaking at 435,000 single unique visitors to the site.
  • Blog traffic increased by 24% compared to April .
  • The four Danny MacAskill video entries attracted over 38,000 views.
  • The video blog posts were shared on Facebook more than 2,400 times.
  • 4,718 people voted on Danny’s next move.
  • The Danny MacAskill video is Leica Camera’s most popular video on YouTube, with nearly 370,000 views as of September 2011.
  • The final video was selected as a “Video we like” by Vimeo and featured on the Vimeo homepage.
  • The final video was also listed on the favorites, entertainment favorites and list as  number 19 on the best noted YouTube videos on May 30.
Post written by Tia Marie Kemp aka @TiaMarieKemp. To learn more from fbadz.com, become a fan!

Paul Adams: Circles of Influence

1 Dec

Paul Adams is a user experience expert currently working on advertising products at Facebook. Having previously worked on Google’s social strategy, he gave a simple, yet richly insightful presentation about his research on social circles at UX Week in San Francisco this past summer. I highly recommend you watch the video when you have the time. Read on for the key takeaways.

UX Week 2011 | Paul Adams | How Our Social Circles Influence What We Do, Where We Go, and How We Decide from Adaptive Path on Vimeo.

Paul began his presentation by illustrating the fact that people are social by design, and have been since the beginning of time. That hasn’t changed in thousands of years, and is not likely to change anytime soon. Technology, however, seems to be evolving at the speed of light. As technology more aligns with human behavior, it becomes more valuable for people and businesses, which is Paul’s first theme:

The web is being rebuilt around people 

Why are we rebuilding the web around people? Because social networks are not new! The Internet is twenty years old, which is still quite young, and it’s been catching up to us being social by nature.

Technology changes really fast. Our behavior does not. It changes really, really slowly. Up to the past few years, technology has not really been very social. Social Networks entered the picture when tech savvy folks created sites like Facebook, which then gave us the ability to connect socially via technology. The marriage of technology and social networks gives us the opportunity for socially connecting to businesses.

Last summer, Ticketmaster launched interactive seat maps that can be linked to your Facebook account. This allows people to be more social when buying tickets. They can check themselves in and see which shows their friends are going to, and even purchase tickets near their friends. Mashable explains, “Ticketmaster’s research suggests that every time a ticket buyer shares his purchase with friends online, the activity converts to $5 in additional ticket sales. The hope, says Levin, is that Facebook seat-tagging will encourage ticket buyers to more frequently share that they’re attending events and drive up ticket sales as a result.”

Paul goes on to give other examples of how businesses are becoming more social by leveraging technology and social networks to connect people “the old fashioned way”, yet through technology. You can see gift ideas for friends on Etsy, or connect with someone about a trip you are planning on TripAdvisor. In essence, focusing on technology will not help as much as understanding behavior. We need to understand what makes people behave the way they do.

People live in networks 

People have sets of relationships that multiply in groups. Each person has multiple independent groups of friends that are built by life experience, shared experiences and hobbies. Paul illustrated this by posing a question: Have you ever had to make a dinner seating plan for your wedding? It is easy to see how one person is part of a diverse mix of groups (and at a wedding, sometimes you don’t want them to mix too closely, such as sitting your conservative aunt next to your college frat buddy). Obviously, people have different types of relationships among their groups of friends. The people who connect groups are not special. They are not “influencers”. They are average people connecting on social networks; they are you and I.

Networks determine how people are influenced 

 Celebrities make us aware, but they don’t influence behavior. We are most influenced by our networks, environment and experiences. The stronger tie we have with someone, the more influence they will have on us.

The amount of information we must process when making a decision has exponentially increased in the Digital Era. Building our social network gives us more brainpower for making decisions. Paul gave another excellent example about someone who was in the market for a new car. This guy spent hours online researching and finally had a sense of what he wanted. He found a car he was interested in and asked a friend to come along for the test drive. He wanted his friend’s opinion; buying a car is a big purchase. As soon as they get to the dealership, the guy’s friend says, “I don’t like it. One of my co-workers has that car, and I really don’t like him. You can’t get this car.” And there you have it the car buyer has made his decision. We ask our close friends for their opinions. They are more likely to influence us over anything else because we trust them.

In this world of exponentially increasing information, our strong ties influence us the most. Which means the wave of influence is strong through our social networks. We don’t share facts; we share feelings. Sharing is a means to an end; we want input from those we trust and we want to help those close to us. In the next two to five years the social network will disrupt vertical business. Who is best positioned to help businesses adapt? User experience designers.

Paul’s final recommendation for business owners: You need to reorient your business around people. If you don’t, someone else will.

More information related to this article can be found here:

http://vimeo.com/29576241

Post written by Tia Marie Kemp aka @TiaMarieKemp. To learn more from fbadz.com, become a fan!

 

 

 

 

People are Talking About: Facebook’s New Metric

16 Nov

There’s a new insight on Facebook, and a lot of people are either talking about it or wondering what it means. Facebook’s new “Talking About This” metric means more transparency for brands and a smart way for administrators to measure their content’s ability to engage.

The following list contains Facebook’s current top ten consumer brands, ranked by engagement:

1. Coca-cola

2. Starbucks

3. Oreo

4. Red Bull

5. Converse All Star

6. Converse

7. Skittles

8. Playstation

9. Pringles

10. Victoria’s Secret

The list changes a bit when we re-order it not according to “Likes”, but according to how many people are “Talking About This”, or rather, are engaging with the brand on Facebook:

1. Starbuck’s

2. Coca-cola

3. Victoria’s Secret

4. Skittles

5. Oreo

6. Red Bull

7. Playstation

8. Converse

9. Pringles

10. Converse All Star

The first list is ranked by how many people “like” the brand’s page. This means they clicked “like” one time. Until now, we had no idea exactly how they were interacting past that point.

The second list is ordered by how many people are “Talking About This” brand. The following actions add up to the “Talking About This” metric:

  • Liking a Page
  • Posting to a Page’s wall
  • Liking, commenting on, or sharing a Page’s post (or other content on a page, like photos, status updates, videos, albums or other content)
  • Answering a posted Question
  • RSVPing to an event hosted by the Page
  • Mentioning a Page in a post (users must formally tag the page)
  • Tagging a Page in a photo
  • Liking or sharing a check-in deal
  • Checking in at a Place

The “Talking About This” metric is visible for anyone who visits a Facebook Page, increasing transparency for the user. Your fans can see if your page is active and engaging just by glancing at this metric.

Here’s a snapshot of Coca-cola’s numbers:

This new gauge of engagement reinforces the brand to fans, and it also offers Facebook Admins a sharp measurement tool. When you are planning content for your page, you want to be mindful of which types of posts are engaging your fans, and what time of day is optimal for sharing content. The “Talking About This” tool gives you the insight you need to gain traction with your fans, as well as measuring the virality of your content.

“Talking About This” has its own tab in the new Facebook Insights. It looks like this:

The tool breaks down fans that have engaged with your page into various demographics, such as, age, sex, location, language, as well as telling you how these fans are talking about your page by illustrating the following:

  • Page Likes
  • Stories generated from your posts
  • Mentions and photo tags
  • Posts by others

Facebook Insights does a remarkable job at painting a picture with their visual graphs; however, if you want to dive deeper, I suggest you export the insights. Facebook Insights Data Export gives you an extremely detailed and intricate story of what is happening on your page. Spend some time getting lost in it and you will find very applicable knowledge about your fans.

The most noteworthy measurement tool included in “Talking About This” is the Viral Reach metric. Virality helps measure the reach of a post against those talking about it. There is a formula for this:

People are Talking About / Reach = Virality 

As Facebook continues emphasizing engagement, the insights provided by the “Talking About This” metric will help Page Admins understand what drives the numbers and how to best engage their advocates. Another reminder about the relationship between quality content and engagement.

 

More information related to this article can be found here:

http://searchengineland.com/demystifying-facebooks-people-are-talking-about-this-metric-96104

http://mashable.com/2011/10/09/top-facebook-brands-talking-about/

Post written by Tia Marie Kemp aka @TiaMarieKemp. To learn more from fbadz.com, become a fan!

It’s That Time of Year: A Guide to Holiday Marketing on Facebook

4 Nov

I grew up watching the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade each year as my Mom set about preparing our dinner. I looked forward to watching the bright and fun festivities. This year, my family will be flying to the east coast to attend the parade in person. The six-year-old in me is super excited, while my adult self is thinking, is it really that time of year already?

As marketers, we should plan our holiday campaigns far before those big balloons make their way down Broadway. It’s becoming second nature for consumers to turn to social media to find promotions, comparison shop and find gift ideas during the holiday season. Facebook holiday shopping trends indicate:

●      Social networking sites experienced a 17% increase in unique visitors during holiday 2010

●      Social visitors to a retail site are twice as likely to convert as the average visitor

●      20% of survey respondents said Facebook was “influential” or “extremely influential” when making purchase decisions

A prime case is my sister’s recent Facebook post:

My sister wants to buy her nearly two-year-old daughter a special baby doll for Christmas. Even after doing research, she is unsure of which doll to purchase, so she extended the question to her friends on her blog and Facebook. This is an ideal example of how social media has the opportunity to influence her decision before she buys – and illustrates the many roles it can play in the buying decision process:

●      Need recognition – Tysha may have decided long ago that she wanted to buy a baby doll, but it’s quite possible she recognized the need from a Wall Post (from the brand or a friend’s post or album), Facebook Ad, blog post from a mommy blogger, photo on Pinterest, newsletter from the company or maybe in a store window. Now that she’s blogged about it and shared it with her friends on Facebook, another young mom may have become aware of the need to buy a Christmas gift in the form of a doll.

●      Information Search – Tysha, being a natural researcher, has probably scoured the web to find information from websites, review sites and social networking sites related to baby dolls. Tweets, blog posts and Facebook pages are sources of information consumers look to when researching products.

●      Evaluation of Alternatives- In this example, Tysha is weighing the alternatives but making the decision social by asking her blog readers and friends and family on Facebook for their input. Here you can see that social media plays a critical role in her actual purchase decision.

●      Purchase – Knowing Tysha, she may announce right away what doll she’s purchased, but she’ll definitely thank everyone for their input and share what doll she decided on (which may also make it easier for her friends to decide which doll to purchase too if the need arises).

●      Post-Purchase - Tysha’s pretty active online with her blog so she’ll probably take pictures of when her daughter opens the present and share those photos on her blog and on Facebook too. She may even share them on the doll company’s page or write reviews on the doll. Or she may simply read another couple of reviews or blog posts about the doll she chose to reinforce the decision she made. If the brand is smart, she’ll be compelled to engage on their Facebook page and stay engaged for when the next holiday rolls around and Tysha needs another gift for her daughter.

When you begin to plan your holiday campaign, the first thing to think about is timing. This question above was posted in mid-October, as my sister wants to finish her holiday shopping by December 1. Obviously, not everyone is such an early bird, however it is important to be mindful of key dates when planning your holiday promotions. Below is a chart based on CPC trends from 2010 to guide you in your planning as suggested by Facebook.

Consumers are scouring the web for deals, gift ideas and suggestions. Here are a few tips from Facebook to meet your marketing objectives. Remember that content is key as you plan the creative components of your campaign and the News Feed remains at the heart of a successful presence on Facebook.

 

Objective 1: Increase traffic and sales

Create viral holiday promotional events and publicize special offers. Every time fans RSVP, click, or check-in, that action gets shared with all of their friends.

Tips:

●      Decide on a sales goal and the promotional activities that will help you get there

●      Offer valuable check-in deals to increase foot traffic (promote the deal with ads before it goes live)

●      Spread the word about your promotion through Standard Like Ads, Sponsored Stories and Page publishing

Objective 2: Generate Awareness

You can leverage Facebook’s tremendous reach and targeting capabilities with ads and Sponsored Stories to generate awareness about your promotions.

Tips:

●      Integrate Social Plugins such as the Like Button into your website, which will allow actions people take off of Facebook to show up in the News Feed and be amplified through Sponsored Stories

●      Post interesting content to your Page with clear calls to action that encourage fan interaction and sharing

●      Boost stories about friends who have engaged with your business

Objective 3: Drive Differentiation

Think of your Facebook Page as a key customer touch point to bring your brand to life. Drive differentiation by creating highly customized and personalized experiences for fans.

Tips:

●      Use the graph API to enable people to shop based on what their friends like

●      Use Applications to bring your brand to life (Ex: create a wish list app for fans to select their favorite items and share with their friends)

●      Build an eCommerce store through an app on your Facebook Page so users don’t have to leave Facebook to make a purchase

Objective 4: Build loyalty and deepen relationships

The people who like your page are saying they want a relationship with you. Show them you appreciate their loyalty with special rewards.

Tips:

●      Listen and respond to customer feedback and inquiries to show fans that they can trust and rely on your business

●      Provide exclusive holiday promotions, merchandise sneak peeks and early access to Black Friday and Cyber Monday sales for fans

Facebook Advertising: Holiday Best Practices

Ad Units

●      Utilize event ads to generate awareness around holiday sale events

●      Run App Shared and App Used Sponsored Stories to boost stories about friends who have interacted with your holiday application

●      Run Standard Like Ads to drive traffic to specific promotions or alert fans of upcoming check-in deals

●      Use Page Post Ads to enhance distribution of Page posts that mention special offers and promotions

Copy

●      Incorporate words such as free, discount and promotions whenever applicable

●      Include a strong call to action that incentivizes fans to share their interactions with your brand to all their friends

●      Include Facebook specific discount codes to give users a sense of exclusivity

●      Identify promotional periods and emphasize end dates on special offers

Targeting

●      Expand your targeting parameters over the holidays to include those making purchases for your target audience

●      Get more impressions and potentially more clicks by utilizing broad age match targeting and broad category targeting

Bidding

●      Due to increased competition, expect CPCs to increase during the holiday season

●      Monitor bids closely to ensure that bids are still competitive enough to win the auction

●      Bid what you’re comfortable paying for your ads

A big thank you to Facebook for providing all of these holiday marketing tips. At publishing time, my sister is leaning toward the American Girl doll for her daughter. Her Facebook friends let her know that they had just opened a big American Girl store in Seattle, so she is already thinking about the great memories to be made there. She invited me to come have lunch with my niece and her new doll at the American Girl bistro.

May you all be so successful in making your brand part of someone’s story.

 

More information related to this article can be found here:

*This post is based on Facebook’s 2011 Holiday Kit

 

Post written by Tia Marie Kemp aka @TiaMarieKemp. To learn more from fbadz.com, becomeafan!

Grow an Ad – The New Expandable Ad Unit

14 Oct

Facebook announced the Expandable Ad Unit last week at Advertising Week in New York. Expandable ads? The first image that comes to mind when I hear “expandable” is of the “boyfriend” I was given several years ago as a funny Valentine’s Day gift. My friends gave me a Grow a Boyfriend:

You are supposed to put this tiny man figure in water and watch it expand into a “boyfriend”. Silly, right? The gift was funny and made me laugh, however, the idea of it, an item that expands when you interact with it, something recommended by a friend to capture your attention, is precisely what Facebook’s expandable ad unit is going to do for ads.

The screen shot below, from the popular infographic The History of Advertising on Facebook, illustrates the advertising evolution we are experiencing on Facebook. Navigating the new features can be tricky, so let’s clarify the expandable ad in relation to other ad types available on Facebook.

Here is what the new ads will do:

●      The new ad will expand when a user or one of their friends “like” or comment on the brand.

●      You will be able to see other ad-related content.

●      It will contain an advertiser’s message.

●      In short, users will be able to interact with the ad as if it was any other piece of shared content.

What the ads won’t do:

●      The ads won’t appear in the news feed as a “like”.

●      It won’t tell you if a friend took action with the brand, such as with Social Ads.

Below is an example of what the ads will look like:

The trend towards blurring content so it doesn’t necessarily appear as an ad or a wall post is epitomized in the expandable ad. Have you ever been influenced by your friends? Have you ever experienced a brand or activity so great that you really want to get the word out? Think about a movie you’ve seen, or a great new restaurant you tried. On the other hand, if you are looking for a show or a place to eat, who is the first person you ask? I’d bet pretty high that it’s your friends. The desire to share is innate, and the new ad unit makes it easier than ever. Engaging their audience’s friend base is a natural way for brands to expand. It’s a win-win for the user and the business when sharing becomes seamless.

Given that the new ads will not “feel” like an ad, they will become more relevant and less obtrusive, utilizing the evidence that users are best able to influence their friends. The expandable ad gives them another tool to do so.

More information related to this article can be found here:

http://mashable.com/2011/10/02/facebook-expandable-ad-unit/

http://news.accuracast.com/social-media-7471/800-million-targeted-by-new-facebook-ad-format/

http://mashable.com/2011/10/03/facebook-ad-strategy/?WT.mc_id=obinsite

Post written by Tia Marie Kemp aka @TiaMarieKemp. To learn more from fbadz.com, become a fan!