Archive for April, 2009

Failwhale, DMs, Hashtags, Retweeting, Tweeps… Finally, a Twitter Glossary!

29
Apr
09

tweet

Now that even Martha Stewart is on Twitter (give it a month before she drops it off?), we have no more excuse to pretend that we know the following of all those weird words.

A great place to start is Gina Holloway’s great post listing the main keywords you should master to get your twitter yellow belt.

And if you still can’t find the term you’re looking for, twittonary should have the definition.

My favorite ones from Gina’s list:

Dweet
Twitter message sent while drunk.

Twittcrastination
Using Twitter to procrastinate.

Twaigslist
To sell something via Twitter.

Tweetard
Someone acting like an idiot on Twitter.

Twhiner
A Twitter user who posts a high number of negative items.

Twittectomy
The act of unfollowing someone on Twitter.

Twoops
Sending a private message to Twitter by accident.

Not overwhelmed by your Friends’ Tweets yet?

29
Apr
09

matrix

Well, it proves that you probably have some brain space to follow more people. That’s when New York Mag’s Twitter Approval Matrix of the Celebrity Twitter scene comes handy: Ashton, Shaq, Jimmy, Diablo, Rachel, John, Martha… they’re all here placed along the 2 axes. Then it’s your call to decide who’s really too insipid to follow.

Social Networks and Brands – Maturing Phase

28
Apr
09

Ad Age published an article today whose title says it all – How to Get the Most Out of Social Networks and Not Annoy Users. The problem with brand presence in Social Networks is that most brands aren’t aware of:

1. A presence doesn’t mean JUST a presence. Means adding value and significance to the Social Network. If the brand is just there and has a non-active profile it is worse than not having anything on at all.

2. Each Social Network is a Social Network on it’s own. The users expect different functionality and tools depending on where they are. So contextualize your presence.

3. There is so much clutter on Social Networks that you should get your presence to be subtle and interesting in order to get user to visit the page. Pushing massive communication just for the sake of getting consumers is considered bad practice and generally annoying.

I could go on, but that’s material for an article on it’s own. Just consider that the time for “Let’s go to Social Network X just for the sake of it” is definitely over. Plan you presence as you would plan on any other medium – if you want have an Ad on TV you’ll be careful as to do an ad that has quality and try to get it on prime time. You probably won’t do a shabby commercial that plays at 6 a.m. (unless that’s your target, of course). The big difference between Social Network Medium Planning and TV Planning is that while at 6 a.m. there won’t be that many people watching, on Social Networks everybody is watching all the time. So plan it carefully.

Apple neatly takes over the homepage of the WSJ today

24
Apr
09

1bill

Celebrating in style its 1.000.000.000th iPhone application downloaded. Check it out while it’s still there ›

Twitter Spam and Effective Brand Presence on Twitter

24
Apr
09

Who?
With every Social Media tool that crosses the mainstream boundary, so does the spam syndrome come along. Spam is undoubtedly a signal of a maturing Social Media site (most of the times a Social Network) that due to popular demand and growth, makes people think of new ways to fool the system and spread commercial messages across the untapped resources that sites such as MySpace, Facebook or Twitter have.

But I came across a fascinating tendency in Twitter regarding to Spam. Twitter users are far different from the general Social Networking users as Twitter itself has a specific audience and a whole different modus operandi.

Twitter, as you might now, is based on users who follow each others’ tweets. This means you can only reach the people who chose to follow you. We can consider Twitter Spam, in a broader sense, as the use of the tool to, using a created profile that can assume a real person or a fictional character, spreads commercial messages that are somewhat out of context of what is the expected behavior and information you’d find on Twitter. It’s massively communicating a product or service when the followers neither wanted nor expected that from a fellow Twitterer. In the traditional Social Networks, you can easily add a bunch of people to cover account and spread commercial messages freely. But on Twitter, if the user doesn’t follow you back, you might as well talk to the wind because all you’ll get is what the users you are following are tweeting.

Twitter Spammer
A really interesting article on Mashable shows us that in the Twitter origins, following a user who follows you was considered a polite practice but, with the growth of Twitter Spammers the oldbies are now much more careful with whom they add back. On another related post, Twitter users have stated that they wouldn’t like direct marketing via Keywords used on Twitter posts. This is a proof of natural evolution and adaptation inside a micro society such as Twitter and poses as an important message to marketers – if you are planning to bring your brand into Twitter, be sure you know the rules of the game and how each Social Network works.

Twitter isn’t a tool to gather users like sheep and massively broadcast a message with no added value. Twitter is a tool that is becoming more and more useful to spread information amongst peers that goes far beyond the “What are you doing?” status. So, if you are planning to user Tweeter, consider the following:

  • Talk transparently from the Brand – not Mr. Joe Nothing who happens to talk a lot about a brand for no apparent reason.
  • Clearly state the purpose of your Twitter – be it for example to show off promotions or for direct input from the consumers, show in the profile information or in the brand’s site exactly what you are using Twitter for.
  • If you decide to use Twitter to talk to users, make sure you actually do engage them. Which means answer back to the comments, join in the conversation that makes sense to the brand and talk the Twitter language.
  • If you plan on using Twitter, figure out a fixed time to do it. Don’t abandon the account for too long as Twitter users are bound to lose interest.
  • If you are using Twitter for promotion purposes, carefully pick you words. Show off promotions that would really interest the users, not every penny you drop from the price.
  • Once again, the keywords are information, transparency and relevance. Those are the main cornerstones for a successful Twitter implementation that turn your brand presence into added value and well received in the Social Network Community and not into general Spam to massively add users. It’s not the amount of users you have – it’s the quality of the information you feed them. That’s what makes a brand presence unique or just plain boring and bad for the brand.

    Spotted: Us Weekly’s Facebook Fan Page sponsored by State Farm

    23
    Apr
    09

    us

    Us Weekly has sold sponsorship of its new Facebook profile to State Farm in what appears to be a first for a media company on the social network website, as well as a first for a company’s fan page.

    As reported by AdAge.
    Hat tip: our favorite CEO, Melissa!

    Puma Lift: Very well crafted video site

    23
    Apr
    09

    puma

    What’s lighter than a Puma Lift shoe?

    Teenagers really care less and less about your brand

    23
    Apr
    09

    af

    As read in the New York times today: “There is a shift in teenage mall culture, where saving money is now more important than finding the hot label.”

    Have you created your Google Profile yet?

    21
    Apr
    09

    op

    Looks like Google is getting ready for the war against bigsight, linkedin and other profile sites. Get yours before some homonym takes it! Instructions on the Google Blog ›

    Thanks Matt for the tip!

    U.S. Now Has Almost As Many Paid Bloggers As Lawyers

    21
    Apr
    09

    bloggers

    Awesome? Scary? You pick your side. In the Wall Street Journal and Silicon Alley Insider.




    The TrendWatch:


    The TrendWatch is the collective postings of some of the FullSIX Group’s designers, strategists, and consultants on new media and marketing trends. It is meant to be an impromptu think-tank, and is a way for us to share theories and beliefs about how we think communication and connectivity is evolving.

    We work for The FullSIX Group; a leading full service marketing agency with digital DNA. From our 15 international offices with over 600 employees, we constantly embrace and encourage innovation to make integrated marketing and communication campaigns that are more accountable and efficient for our clients.