Tagged with facebook

The abrasive nature of Facebook’s frictionless sharing

frictionlesssharing

The above is a screengrab from Facebook (with names redacted to avoid further blushing) which highlights the futility of Facebook’s new frictionless sharing system, whereby – if the app is enabled – your viewing habits on certain sites are instantly broadcast to your Facebook friends.

The above incident is fairly self-explanatory but does suggest that users are unaware of just how the new system works and that greater privacy issues lurk beneath the surface. If this non-permission based sharing becomes de rigeur for the social web, viewing habits will change drastically and see a wave of NSFW derivations spread across content headlines:

  • Not Safe For Family
  • Not Safe for Significant Other
  • Not Safe for Parents etc.

Browsing on the web is still – at least to your curated public audience – a largely anonymous activity. Sure, the service providers, data warehouses and Ad servers know what you are doing but your friends and family don’t and nor should they need to, within the bounds of taste, decency and legality.

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Don Draper Pitches Facebook Timeline

VIDEO EMBEDDING SUBSEQUENTLY DISABLED. VIEW HERE

An excellent and wholly accurate take on the Ethos of the latest attempt by Facebook to soak up your data by piecing your entire life together through them and therefore, online.

Visually, Facebook Timeline looks great. It takes a significant step away from the also ran of Google+ and makes the move towards increase targeted advertising opportunities.

From 30 September, Facebook’s servers will swell. In the meantime, just let Don Draper explain why it works at a human level.

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Google+ stream of consciousness

Google+ or Google Circles or G+, as some are choosing to call it, is the new social network on the block. You can read great overviews herehere and here. The curious thing is that it gets no coverage in this month’s Wired magazine but is arguably the biggest thing in tech, networks and online right now. But that is surely for another blog about the pace of print.

Google+ then…

It looks good, there is no clutter. Gone are the days of generating your own html code for a terrible MySpace profile and the parasitic Apps that Facebook suffers from are (currently) not evident in Google+. Keep it simple never worked so good.

It is the myriad opportunities that Google+ affords that make it such a compelling social network. This piece about what Google should offer brands is near spot on. Moreover, it highlights the driving force behind what Google+ is and will be. A social network where user input is valued, changes, new features and yes, sweet sweet privacy are driven by consumer demand and not thrust upon the user a la Zuckerberg and his book of faces. The collaborative nature of Google+ and its features already sets it apart.

I can see that I will use Google+ as an internal comms network, no need for Yammer et al.

I can see that I will use it as a sCRM system to segment and communicate what I want and with the right people. Targeted comms were made for Circles or vice versa

I am using it to connect with (supposedly unreachable) people. I can be part of their conversation and not just a bean counted in their Twitter metrics.

Localisation is going to be more usable than ever, again via Circle based segmentation.

Could it be used as the main communication/website hybrid for business, big and small, why not? Im not saying websites are dead but I think it could sit pretty as destination 2 for a business, with Facebook pages 3rd and Twitter 4th.

G+ commerce…one day but F commerce isn’t exactly setting the world on fire right now

I find it is making me consider audience more, yet helping me reach more and wider.

I have spotted some netiquette issues already. This article, the one you are kindly still reading here, in essence, it is a blog post –arguably it is a Google+ based stream of consciousness. But where should it go? Not bound by a 140 character limit, it could go straight into my stream on Google+ (and get more comments) but I am still a stickler for the long tail benefits of content and blogs.

Game-changing, even if it just becomes a niche business/geeks/marketers network, yes. Challenger to Facebook? Not likely, I don’t really think it needs to be.

Sparks, they’re rubbish (at the moment)

Quora, now redundant.

Networking and online communication dynamics; Google+ allows varying dynamics under one roof. One user’s categorisation of individuals into a circle may differ wildly from someone else.

Can it enter the everyday behaviour of many? Can you G+ along to TV like you can with Twitter? I don’t think the dynamics of regular updates in the stream would be tolerated, unless of course you create a reciprocated Circle of those that tolerate fast and furious updates about XFactor etc

Scalability – just you wait for more people to get on board, will it be manageable? Time will tell.

I could go on, I want to go on. I want to write about the need for integration with Evernote, Buffer and Twitter. Heck, integration with other products that belong to Google.

Google+ is work in progress, no one refers to it as “in Beta” but you can beta your bottom dollar or Empire Avenue groat that this is early days, toe-in-the-water stuff before the invitation wall comes down. There is much wrong with Google+ but then there is a great deal wrong with Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and MySpace…

Tell me what you think and do feel free to disagree vehemently with anything I have said.

 

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I’m a celebrity get me endorsing

Celebrity endorsements are nothing new, if anything, in this uber celebrity 15 minutes of fame driven society they are on the increase but what do they actually do for brands and where are the endorsements of the future going?

There are recent notable examples of brands dropping their celebrity face in the wake of revelations and tabloid conjecture. Notably, Kerry Katona, the bastion of motherhood, being ditched by Iceland on the back of Sunday tabloid revelations relating to substance abuse beyond a £1 Iceland ready-meal.

When pairing up a celebrity with a brand and things go well, it is easy to kick back and relax. That massive chunk of funding you have given this public eye entity was money well spent. Gary Lineker never got booked in his career and has carved a niche as ‘Mr Nice Guy’ so no sweat over him doing something bad like popping a cheeky Pringle.

But a brand can not control the one they pay to endorse. You can have as water-tight a contract as you like that says as a beacon of the brand you can not do this or dabble in that, but celebrities are human, they are suckers for temptation when they are offered the world and they do stray.

To the future, I envision a slight change in the role of celebrity endorsements and this is with a view to the use of Twitter and Facebook. This theory is based on observations of how things are starting to unfold on these platforms.

Agencies can now create the celebrity and thus control their brand endorsing face more carefully. For example, Compare the Market and their ingenious and ubiquitous Compare the Meerkat campaign has seen sales increase and thanks to a combined social media assault through Facebook and Twitter, Sergei – the little furry face of cheaper car insurance has single paw-dly hit the big time. Through an interactive and engaging Twitter and Facebook account, not to mention the Compare the Meerkat website itself, our little Russian friend has driven traffic and sales to the desired Compare the Market website without a single mention of the target site in its Facebook or Twitter activity. No tweets with links to the best deal or target site homepage, just pure character based tweets and a killer catchphrase that has reverberated around playgrounds, offices and everyday conversation. Simples.

Facebook and Twitter celebrity accounts with mass followings (and comparatively minuscule follow backs themselves) provide a ready made platform to endorse anything for a fee to their impressionable and idolising following. The rules have changed and results are there for the taking.

If you take the example of Stephen Fry and his Twitter account, not through paid for endorsement but out of his passion to share great Tech tips, on several occasions, Mr Fry has brought small time websites to their knees by Tweeting a recommendation to his vast following to go and check out site X. Site X not being prepared for such a volume of traffic crashes-the hat tip from Mr Fry a blessing and curse in equal measure.

So of the future, celebrity accounts will be created and maintained by agencies and not the Celebs themselves. (I am still hugely sceptical that Andy Murray updates his Twitter given the nature of the Tweets-all smiles and positivity-it appears awkward, forced and just not personable.) As soon as the following is built up, then the link to product or website X is casually dropped into Twitter conversation and the loyal following navigates to the intended source and laps up what their idol has recommended.

Sure the same pitfalls apply in that you cannot control the celebrity’s behaviour in real life, that is of course unless you create  a fictional Meerkat, but you can cultivate the following and control the brand message with a yield of higher results for a fraction of the cost of a television advert.

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Come on you Twits! Get on your Facebook and let’s blog our way out of the recession

Originally published by Marketing Donut in my guise as a blogger for small businesses looking to get the most from their marketing.

In a downturn, it isn’t just small businesses that look to make their pennies stretch further or spend more time investing time resources into ‘free’ marketing opportunities but they certainly have a greater opportunity to do such things. If trade is down and money is tight, things might look bleak and the marketing resources cupboard somewhat bare.

One way that you may choose to keep on top of your marketing activities, even if the budget has run out, is to try out something that requires little or no money (beyond buying a computer and internet connection). Social Networking or online media resources are a great way to make use of your time in an inexpensive manner in order to drum up trade and to make sure your business is ‘out there.’

If you are unfortunate enough to have less footfall than you are accustomed to in headier times, you may be in a position to spend more time on Twitter, Facebook and any of the hundreds of online social networking sites where you can promote, network, converse or establish your brand and make real connections. If you do this well you may see that trade picks up again and so you have less time to commit to online activities as you are dealing with fantastic customers making purchases. When trade does pick up once again, does online marketing through social networking have to give?

I believe in the cliché that tough times make us stronger but beyond that I anticipate that this recession has rewritten the rules of small business marketing and the online marketing model of the future will see social networking as a standard practice in advertising for small firms. When the tills are ringing again and the ‘R’ word is but a distant memory, try and set aside short and frequent bursts of online marketing activity, be it Twitter, Blogging or Facebook, for great results long-term.

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