Tag Archive for 'myspace'

Meet Gary Vaynerchuk, the Social Media Sommelier

23
May
08

Back in SxSW last March, Kathy Sierra introduced her audience to her friend Gary Vaynerchuk, who is, according to her, the “best example of someone who kicks ass at everything he does”:

  • On winelibrary.com, Gary shares his passion for wine with 80,000 viewers a day. Increase his stats, subscribe to his motivational show on iTunes andwatch it on the subway on your way to work in the morning. So much energy can only wake you up!
  • He already published 450 episodes. They all use the same recipe: a webcam, a bottle or two, a glass, a bucket to spit, and a super-excited Gary.
  • Gary uses many 2.0 online tools to promote his brand: himself. Friend him up on Corkd.com where he posts wine reviews, on facebook, twitter, pownce, linkedin, viddler, myspace
  • He just released Gary Vaynerchuk’s 101 Wines: Guaranteed to Inspire, Delight, and Bring Thunder to Your World, a book that is already #2 on Amazon in the Buying Wine guides. Check out the book page on the e-retailer’s site, Gary blogs there, gives consumers his email address to answer their questions before they click on buy, consumers post video reviews and they all gave a 5-star rating!
  • To support his book, Gary does a TV-tour. Keep an eye on your TV guide, according to his previous national TV appearances (Conan O’Brian, Ellen DeGeneres), it should be worth spending some time on your couch. The weather sucks anyway.
  • With his passion and the love from his fans, he turned the wine-merchant family business in New Jersey from a $4.5 millions to now a $60m-a-year enterprise. Some call him Oprah 2.0.
  • I am always embarrassed when I go out because my friends think that, as the son of French great wine-makers, I probably know everything about wine, so I am always asked to pick the bottle. Truth is, I have no wine culture at all. Friends, Mum, Dad, I’ve ordered Gary’s book this morning, you’ll soon be able to trust me when I say that we should go for the 2005 Chateau Lafayette Reneau Dry Riesling for its floral aromas, bright citrus flavors abound on the tongue.

    Can Google Friend Connect change the way we use/create websites?

    13
    May
    08

    The video above explains in great deal of details how Google is gonna help making the web more social. Following similar data portability announcements by Facebook and MySpace.

    Looks like your online posse will follow you everywhere soon. And grow.

    With this functionality, there’s no end to the possibilities. A small site dedicated to mountain biking in Moab, for example, would be able to have members who could exchange maps, tips, and pictures of their latest rides. A stroke victims support site could help grieving family members assist one another by sharing advice. A politician’s site could enable supporters to advocate their viewpoints. A musician’s site could give fans the chance to interact full tilt with the band and one another.

    As read on the GoogleBlog.

    If it’s important, it will find me

    28
    Mar
    08

    rabbit.jpg

    That’s, in essence, how the “social media generation” deals with with political news and news in a broader sense. For the first time, social networks and blogs are playing a major role in a presidential campaign in the USA. Facebook, myspace, most of the web 2.0 sites that we use today didn’t exist 4 years ago, during the precedent elections, or with a limited audience.

    But as of February 2008, they respectively have 8.6, 17.7 millions average daily visitors.

    According to interviews and recent surveys, younger voters tend to be not just consumers of news and current events but conduits as well — sending out e-mailed links and videos to friends and their social networks. And in turn, they rely on friends and online connections for news to come to them. In essence, they are replacing the professional filter — reading The Washington Post, clicking on CNN.com — with a social one.

    “There are lots of times where I’ll read an interesting story online and send the U.R.L. to 10 friends,” said Lauren Wolfe, 25, the president of College Democrats of America. “I’d rather read an e-mail from a friend with an attached story than search through a newspaper to find the story.”

    Go check out the New York Times article for more details.

    Sorry for the almost unrelated Easter photo.

    The Semi-Long Tail of Social Networks

    26
    Feb
    08

    socialnetworks.jpg

    A good visual reminder that there are other social networks than Facebook and MySpace. Would love to see an update with more recent stats, but it’s a good start! Spotted in a French newspaper by the great BFFB. (We’ll be at SxSW too if you want to meet!)

    Eurovision 2.0

    07
    Feb
    08

    eurovision1.jpg

    The Eurovision Song Contest is an annual competition held among countries of the EU. Each country submits a song to be performed on live TV and then casts votes for the other countries’ songs to determine the most popular song in the competition. It is one of the numerous Song Contests with the difference that Eurovision had been around every year since 1956.

    This year, with the claim “Save Eurovision” Spanish public TV has decided to take a fresh approach to the Spanish presence on the Song Contest and so they’ve decided to use MySpace to select this year’s Spanish candidate.

    MySpace is the main social networking site used by emerging singers and groups to promote their music. And because of this they have decided to give the opportunity to these social talents who are more present on the web.

    TVE director has said that “even though the Song Contest is still working well, they want to give it a new profile and open it to a wider participation”. I have to say that for me the festival has become really old fashion and I agree that by opening to the younger consumer will help to create hype. The MySpace group already has 243 candidates to be the next Eurovision singer and 1700 friends (huge participation compared to previous years when it was broadcast on TV). Having said this, the festival organisers will need to work on the event too and realise we are not in 1968 anymore.

    The 5 most voted songs will go to the final election event broadcast by TVE on the 1st of March and the public will vote for their favourite via SMS and phone calls.

    It’s a big step for traditional Spanish public TV to take this approach; there has been a lot of positive coverage on Spanish media, and it’s done a lot to their image.

    Other countries have been doing that for 10 years, it’s Pop Idol, but I guess it’s a revolution for a traditional country like mine.

    DIY: Polls for Presidential Elections ‘08

    06
    Feb
    08

    Google trends
    While Olivier was writing his post yesterday, I was also thinking about the Elections, polls and whether the Internet could provide hints on the candidates results, through its different channels.

    I’ve always defended the idea that the web speaks the truth, thanks to the information boost of the participatory web (web 2.0). It is a living, constantly mutating common intelligence, it is the brain of the connected humanity and, for better and for worst, the weighted sum of our individual conscience, desires, fears, ambitions and beliefs.

    So, if we have all this trustworthy information at our reach, than we are all able to analyze it and take our own conclusions. We can actually make our own polls by measuring our representative sources.

    Google Trends (see the picture above), tells us that Barack Obama is the candidate with most search volume registered on Google, among U.S. users. The same analysis on Republican candidates shows us that Ron Paul is, by far, the Republican candidate that is on the Top-of-Mind of U.S. users. Strange, hum? This comes as a surprise for me as for you, because I expected McCain to lead this indicator. So, Barack Obama wins on Google Trends.

    I analysed Democratic Candidates (Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Mike Gravel) and Republican Candidates (John McCain, Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, Ron Paul, Alan Keyes).

    I tried to discover which candidates’ names where mentioned more often in web pages indexed in Google. That is to say, what was the share-of-exposure of each candidate. Here, Hillary Clinton is the winner, with 11.600.000 pages, followed by John McCain (7,580,000) and Ron Paul (4,780,000).

    I also considered rerunning this analysis in Yahoo!, since Google normally indexes fewer pages than Yahoo! Here, share-of-exposure has a different winner: Barack Obama (158,000,000 pages), followed by Hillary Clinton (150,000,000) and John McCain (103,000,000).

    YouTube gives us an idea of the share of audiovisual material each candidate has out there. The big winner here is Republican candidate Ron Paul (105.000 videos), followed by Democrats Hillary Clinton (33.200) and Barack Obama (32.500).

    Facebook tells us how many friends/supporters each candidate has on this platform. Obama crushes the competition with a total of 374.650 friends, followed by Hillary Clinton (90.912) and Ron Paul (82.353).

    On MySpace, Hillary Clinton is the winner with 41.123 friends, followed by Mitt Romney (37.077) and Mike Huckabee (34.717). John McCain, in my opinion made a big mistake in this platform. When you visit his page, you have a resume of this candidate and a link to become his friend. Only after he approves your friend request, you are able to see the regular MySpace sections… so I never got the chance to find out how many friends he has! Seems to me that Democrats understand the Internet and social networks better than Republicans.

    Through Google BlogSearch, I found out that the Blogosphere produces much more content on Barack Obama than anyone else (3,211,145 posts), followed by Hillary Clinton (1,166,239) and John McCain (1,117,461). Unfortunately I didn’t have the time to make a qualitative analysis, so I don’t know if this is positive Buzz or negative Buzz…

    Then I measured each of the candidates official websites’ Link Popularity, and I discovered that Ron Paul has the most websites linking to his (2,948,938 back-links), followed by Barack Obama (1,206,735) and Mike Huckabee (721,072).

    Last but not least, I compared the estimated traffic of the candidates’ official websites through Alexa: Obama has the most traffic by far, followed by Hillary Clinton and John McCain.

    So, I gathered all the data and here are the final results of my DIY polls for the future president of the USA:

    • #1 – Hillary Clinton (1st in MySpace and Google, 2nd in Facebook, YouTube, Yahoo! and Blogosphere).
    • #2 – Barack Obama (1st in Facebook, Yahoo! and the Blogosphere, 2nd in Link Popularity, 3rd in YouTube).
    • #3 – John McCain (2nd in Google, 3rd in the Blogosphere and Yahoo!).

    Ron Paul really intrigued me… I’d say he had better chances than McCain, since he was 1st on Link Popularity and YouTube, 3rd on Google and Facebook. Well, but Super Tuesday already proved me wrong, McCain’s the man for the Republicans.

    Now I only have to wait a couple of months to see if my theory is right and if we all can start making our own polls based on my interpretation on the spirit of web 2.0: user participation leads to the strengthening and accuracy of collective consciousness.

    Just coming back from brunch with my friends Cristina, Daniel and their 12 year old son Sid. I was asking him about his Internet usage and what he and his friends do online. And the answer shocked me:

    Kids don’t do Facebook. Internet is for adults and it’s boring. They think they’re so cool with their Facebook but it’s soooo old. We don’t use email, myspace, IM… We text! I just gave up my monthly allowance to get unlimited texts!

    So weird to get a reality-check from a 12 y.o. but thanks kid!

    By olivier PEYRE [FullSIX USA], Comments

    STUMBLEUPON THEM, DIGG THEM… THEY’RE DEL.ICIO.US.!

    07
    Jan
    08

    One week into 2008, we thought that it would be interesting to make a 100% subjective list of the 10 things that shaped our digital landscape for 2007. So the team at Trendwatch Daily went post-fishing last weekend to celebrate our 6-month anniversary and this is what we came back with, in chronological order.

    Stresstetainment
    A new form of stress born from the over-exposure to too many sources of entertainment at once.

    Design Class #1: The Homepage
    It’s very often the 1st impression that users get from your site, so you’d better get it right the first time!

    Never Ending Friending. Just not with a TV-set.
    Understanding the shift in media consumption: it’s all about Return on Involvement.

    Social Networking Profiling Part 1 – The Consumers
    A typology of the SN users to better understand users and consumers.

    Branding in an age of User-Driven Innovation and P2P Production
    What are the consequences when individual and communities become more productive than profit-seeking companies?

    Mobile and developing countries: Mobile and developing countries
    Because you can’t find a Starbucks with Wi-Fi in Nigeria.

    Facebook Redefines Privacy
    Probably one of the biggest PR screw-up of the year.

    The Slow Death of Campaign Microsites?
    Social Networks taking over, is there still room for those dedicated mini-sites?

    Virtual World theft just got real
    The line becomes very blurry between first and second life.

    Google’s rule: don’t waste time debating
    Or how to reduce development costs and pointless meetings.

    Up for grabs in 2008: the coming 2008 dot-com crash, Wall Street gets frustrated with Google, Nintendo banks on fitness, smartphones become mainstream, online social networks grab more ads $ and integrate hi-def video.

    And you, what’s in your crystal ball for 2008?

    (post written with Manuel Faisco)

    The Slow Death of Campaign Microsites?

    14
    Nov
    07

    You’ve probably heard all the buzz about Facebook’s new advertising system. Gary Gil made a video of a campaign setup process and I have to say that they managed to make a boring process pretty cool. I love the real-time number of users you’re targeting according to the criteria you’ve selected! Reminds me of the first days of Google AdSense. Ok, ok, I’m a huge geek for actually enjoying the video, but i’ve also posted the Wonderbra one a couple of hours ago, which should make things even!

    MediaWeek has a really interesting article about how campaign microsites are rapidly being replaced by social networks. Tons of great examples of brands like Sprite and Dove that realized that it’s easier to make the most of the 100 millions of MySpace users and 50 for Facebook, instead of chasing consumers to go on their own site. As one of our client says: Fish where the fish are!

    OpenSocial 101

    07
    Nov
    07

    Google’s OpenSocial - The Facebook Counterattack? 

    If you’ve been paying attention to what is going on online, the new keyword is “OpenSocial“. Recently announced by Google, OpenSocial opened its doors to developers on November 1st, and believe me, it does deserve the websphere hype it has been generating.

    Essentially, what Google did was provide a common set of APIs for social applications across multiple websites by tapping into 3 distinct sets – member profiles, social graph and member activities. Unlike the Facebook case, that uses FBML (Facebook Markup Language) in it’s APIs, requiring every developer to invest yet again in learning a language to develop a Brand presence in another Social Network, OpenSocial allows developers to use JavaScript and HTML to create apps for Social Networks. Of course, at this stage, the participants are “scarce” – but by no means unimportant! With names such as MySpace, Hi5 or LinkedIn for Hosts (the place where the Apps can be used) and ILike, Slide or Flixter for Developers (the companies that develop APIs for the OpenSocial library and key Facebook App developers), there is definitely an alarm ringing for Brands to check it out. During the initial release of OpenSocial, several examples were presented. Continue reading ‘OpenSocial 101′




    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.