Tagged with Google

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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Ten years ago I used Bolt Blue. Five years ago I used to chat on MSN. In five years time will I still use Twitter?

They say instant chat is dead. I still use it fleetingly, I have moved on from MSN and onto Google chat. I feel this is purely for the fact it is integrated seamlessly into Googlemail and it can cut down on the number of emails exchanged in a day with some contacts.

As with any media type, my habits have changed. I no longer watch kids TV (well, on occasion) I no longer hang out on music website forums. I no longer need them.

Thinking back to my web habits of ten, seven, five or even three years ago, my sequence of events run very differently once my computer has booted.

Casting my mind back I can just about remember the order

5 years ago

From desktop > Internet Explorer x 5 separate windows > iTunes > MSN Messenger > Microsoft Word

Once within IE > Facebook > DrownedinSound.com > BBC News > Hotmail.com > Uni email > Hype Machine > AddictingGames

Today

From Desktop > Google Chrome > Tweetdeck > Spotify > Open Office

Once within Google Chrome > Googlemail > Twitter > WordPress > ReQall > Google Reader > Facebook > BBC News

  • The notable changes are the change in browser choice.
  • The move from music based websites as a place to ‘hang out’.
  • The use of tabbed browsing meaning five separate IE windows are no longer needed to drain machine performance.
  • Music is now cloud based.
  • Word processing is free.
  • Content and organisation are valued commodities.
  • Social networking takes place across networks.

What is your sequence from ten, seven, five or three years ago? Have your habits changed through natural web wastage (So long Geocities) or more through life changes?

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DONT (Susan Boyle) CHASE (Google) THE (Nike) SEARCH (Britney Spears) ENGINES (Coca Cola) LET (Disney) THEM (CNN) COME (Vodafone) TO (BMW) YOU (MySpace)

source: www.allthingssem.com

Having read this blog I have found myself, on the whole, in agreement that blog writing – corporate, personal or otherwise should primarily be about quality of content and message over chasing ratings, rankings and what Google wants. In concession, there is an element of an underlying need to thread content with optimisable wording as a necessary evil.

As the Marketing Journal Blog says: ‘Launching a blog and waiting for people to arrive is not as easy as it might seem. You could find yourself writing for months and even years without mass amounts of traffic.’ As the title of this post shows, simply name dropping some big search engine performers is not going to cut it, although I have found in my short time of blogging with a purpose, that the most traffic my site has received has been associated with having the word ‘Vodafone,’ as part of this post.

Primarily, blogs should be written with personality, consideration of audience and on topic. Blogs should not be about chasing the that will feast on the most optimisable word or phrase. Write because you want to, because you want your reader to engage, comprehend or learn something from you. It is demonstrably pejorative for your content to be overly shaped by search engine optimisation (SEO) than for your content to force the SEO through quality writing and content.

Well written content will optimise itself. If the text is good it will be read, consumed and recommended to others. As part of my Public Relations support role, I point people in the direction – predominantly by linking through the Marketing Donut Twitter account – of articles that are a great read , of interest to the target audience and that add a little something to the debate. The power of a ‘Retweet’ will seed good reads throughout the online community in no time at all, which will return a more organic incoming traffic and data return.

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The Marketing Donut – PR Support Role

donut logo

My current employment is a temporary position with BHP Information Solutions‘ Small Business offshoot concept – The Marketing Donut. The Marketing Donut is a fantastic pool of tools and resources with content written by experts in their own particular business field. Its conception came with the powerful backing of Google and Royal Mail.



My role, as PR Support, is to drive traffic and registrations on the site through the means of online communication – predominantly through using Twitter to highlight articles of interest on the Donut or debates on the Marketing Donut Forum or Blog. I also link to other interesting articles written elsewhere which fit in and appeal to those who are running a small business enterprise. I also monitor and drive interactions on the Donut’s Linkedin, Facebook and Ecadamy profiles.



As part of linking to comment elsewhere – be it on business or marketing websites or blogs – on occasion I link back to the Donut, in one instance I secured a valuable positioning on Business Week for a 24 hour spot. Having seen an article relating to the use of Twitter in Business and knowing there was an active debate on the Donut Forum on this topic itself, I commented on their insightful article and highlighted the debate existing on the Donut.

A few hours later I received e-mail correspondence from the Business Week site Editor asking for a photo in order to put my mugshot and comment on the homepage as part of their scheme to highlight pertinent points made by their readership. Having been on the homepage for 24 hours, the comment and photo is now on their “In Your Face” section for the foreseeable future.



businessweek

Hopefully securing this will have opened up the Donut to a wider online audience than it has seen previously and site traffic, registrations and more will be noticeably greater, with the ultimate upshot being that small businesses are getting great quality resources, tools and expert advice from the site-without any annoying pop up adverts!

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