Tag Archives: people

What’s Not to Like About Twitter’s New Retweet Feature?

Twitter is of course in the process of rolling out a new retweet feature. The feature adds a retweet button to each tweet on your timeline, much like the "reply" button that has always been there. However, one distinct difference between these two buttons is that where the reply button fills out your form with the proper information ("@username"), the retweet button sends the initial tweet to your followers' timelines without giving you your own tweet. In other words, you don't get to add anything to it, you're just duplicating a tweet that came to you and sending it to your followers. You're forwarding it. There are things to like about the feature. For one it's more convenient if you just want to pass on an interesting tweet. If you're the one being retweeted, it puts you in the spotlight in other people's streams rather than the person who retweeted you. It kind of feels like you're getting more credit for your tweets, although if you are just tweeting a link to someone else's blog post that might not necessarily come off as a positive. Twitter CEO Evan Williams put up an interesting blog post last week defending the feature before it even had much of a chance to get torn apart by users. He knew it would be controversial, and he even acknowledged that fact. As happens when any heavily-used site makes changes, some people get upset about it. Lisa Barone at outSpoken Media made a list of " things that suck " about the new retweet feature, and she brings up a number of good points, but her biggest peeve seems to be that of the avatars of people she doesn't know showing up in her stream. "Showing the unfamiliar avatar does not give me 'more context' for the tweet. It gives me less because I don’t know this individual," she says. "If I were to see Rae’s avatar, I’d know to trust the content. I'd know it already passed the snuff test. When I see someone else’s avatar, I’m thrown off and confused. Will I get used to it? No, I'll simply learn to ignore things from people I don’t know." She has a valid point in that seeing unfamiliar faces can be a bit off-putting, but aren't the retweets still passing the "snuff test" since they are still being retweeted by people you follow? It's not like these "strangers" are actually coming in and spamming us. It's just a visually different way of presenting them. Whether or not we like that is one thing, but it's a retweet from someone we're following just as it was before in this regard. A great many Twitter users probably don't even recognize half of the people they follow anyway. That said, there are a number of other issues with the feature, as Barone points out. Some of the ones she touches on are: - Can't add own commentary (what if you don't agree with what you're retweeting?) - Plays down user's visibility in own network - Changes the definition of retweeting (makes it more like a Facebook "like") The feature is still in limited beta testing, so regardless of what you feel about the feature, there is a possibility it will change. Even still, if you don't like the feature, you don't have to use it. You can still use the classic "RT" method just as you have always done. You just have a new option now. Depending on how many of the people you follow use the new feature, your Twitter experience can be affected more or less by it. Are you getting the new retweet feature yet? What is your opinion? What do you like about it? What do you dislike about it. Tell WebProNews readers what you think about it . Related Articles: > Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged avatars, barone, ceo, definition, feature, followers, people, person, suck, traffic, tweet, tweets, twitter | Leave a comment

LinkedIn, Microsoft Outlook To Forge Ties

Heavy users of LinkedIn and Microsoft Outlook will soon have to do a lot less tab-toggling. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged certain-sectors, connector, entities, linked, microsoft outlook, million-user, nbsp, networking support, outlook, outlook contacts, outlook social connector, people, related articles, sectors | Leave a comment

You May Get More Traffic from Twitter Than You Realize

If you use Twitter or create content, you have probably figured out by now that it can be a great tool for driving traffic to your site. There are measures you can take to expand this if your content is not bringing in the Twitter traffic on its own. Is Twitter a significant traffic source for your site? Comment here . If you're not seeing much traffic from Twitter, there is a chance it's coming in anyway, and you're just not aware of it. For that matter, if you are getting a lot of traffic from Twitter, you may be getting even more than you thought. Stan Pugsley, director of business intelligence for iCrossing says that nearly 70% of referral traffic from Twitter goes unmeasured, particularly if you are using web analytics tools like Google Analytics or Omniture. "The problem is not with the web analytics tools, but with the Twitter applications like Tweetdeck and Twhirl that are not based in an Internet Browser," explains Pugsley. "When a user clicks through a link in a tweet, those applications do not register a referring URL that can be picked up by the destination website. It appears that they are coming directly to the site. According to TweetStats, only 31.7% of tweets originate from twitter.com, and those are the visitors that can be tracked back to tweets." Pugsley suggests testing this for yourself, by installing a twitter app like Tweetdeck, installing the Live HTTP headers plug-in for Firefox, and clicking through the URL in a tweet, then looking at the referrer. His observation about missing Twitter traffic stats is not a new one, but probably still a topic that gets overlooked frequently. Back in the summer, Danny Sullivan wrote a couple of articles for Search Engine Land tackling the subject. These dig in quite a bit further. If you feel like you are being shortchanged on your Twitter traffic, these are required reading. As far as simply increasing your traffic from Twitter, here are a few tips: 1. Include some kind of Twitter/tweet button on your content. 2. Abide by this equation, or at least the principle behind it. 3. Make your Twitter presence known throughout your site 4. Use your Twitter presence along with your site on business cards, signatures, etc. 5. Actively engage on Twitter. 6. Tweet your own content. If they're following you, they must be interested in what you have to say (that doesn't mean to just Tweet ads and sales pitches. Tweet useful information). 7. Include ways to share your content on other social networks. It will often find its way to Twitter by other people. 8. Integrate Twitter into your other marketing channels (email for example). I'm sure there are plenty of other tips that could go here. Feel free to share some if you have them. Twitter is much more than a way to drive traffic, but when traffic is the goal, it certainly holds a great deal of potential. If you were unaware that you may be getting Twitter traffic that is not being counted as such, perhaps you will see even more potential. Have you found Twitter traffic that wasn't being counted by analytics services? Talk to ArisYulianta and Friends... about it . Related Articles: > Driving Traffic with Twitter > An Equation for Getting More Traffic from Twitter > Where Social Media Fits Into the SEO Equation Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged danny sullivan, destination website, equation, firefox, internet, internet browser, omniture, people, referral traffic, social, social-networks, traffic | Leave a comment

Twitter To Make Suggested Users Feature More Like Twellow’s?

Last month Twitter CEO Evan Williams made some comments at the Web 2.0 Summit, indicating that the company was strongly considering ditching the "Suggested Users" list. This is a list that co-founder Biz Stone once discussed as being a way to get new users engaged with Twitter. This has historically been an important thing for Twitter to consider, as user retention rates have suffered in the past. "When you don't follow any other accounts on Twitter the product is not as relevant as it could be," Stone said in an old post to the Twitter blog. "To improve the user experience, we started suggesting some accounts to follow. As a result, new users are much more engaged and active." But since then, the company's attitude towards this list has changed. Williams noted that the list was initially meant as a way to help new users, but it became controversial. The biggest problem with the list is that it is not personalized. If you are not interested in the specific people that Twitter thinks you should be, you will still find no reason to continue using the service (at least if you are the type of person who needed suggested users to find value in the service in the first place). Our own Twellow service (shameless plug) recently launched a new feature, which provides suggested users for Twitter on a more personalized level , making it far more useful. The feature is aimed at connecting Twitterers with similar interests. It's tailored to the interests of the specific user, rather than just one list for everyone. It appears that Twitter is looking to offer its suggested user list in a similar way. Sarah Perez at ReadWriteWeb reports that Biz Stone told a crowd at a conference in Malaysia, that the current suggested users list "will" be going away, and "in its stead will be something that is more programmatically chosen, something that actually delivers more relevant suggestions." That sounds pretty similar, but one difference is that Twellow's feature is already available. There's no telling how long it will take for Twitter to actually roll it out. We're still waiting on the retweet feature. Twitter's Lists feature of course was recently launched after a significant wait, and it should go a long way in helping user retention moving into the future. It's an incredibly valuable tool for Twitter users, for a variety of reasons . Between that and a more personalized suggested users list on the way, Twitter should be keeping more people using its service longer. Do you think a personalized suggested users list would be beneficial to Twitter users? Have you tried Twellow's version? Talk to ArisYulianta and Friends... what you think . Related Articles: > Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged ceo, crowd, location-adds, people, person find, reason, relevant suggestions, review and story, suggested users list, suggested-users, twellow, twitter, twitterers, user | Leave a comment

Tweeting Habits Parsed By Time, Day

A new report has shed some light on the habits of Twitter users. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged nbsp, one billion, people, research scientist, scientist, time, tweets-measured, twitter, twitter-down, yahoo | Leave a comment

Google Gives Users a Way to Lock SafeSearch

Google has launched a new way to lock SafeSearch. What this accomplishes is, users will have to enter their password to change the setting, and Google Search results will be visibly different than when SafeSearch is not locked. Google demonstrates how to to lock SafeSearch with the following short clip: When SafeSearch is locked, there is a big image in the top right-hand corner of Google that shows colored balls. This makes it easy to tell whether or not SafeSearch is locked. "Even from across the room, the colored balls give parents and teachers a clear visual cue that SafeSearch is still locked," Google says . "And if you don't see them, it's quick and easy to verify and re-lock SafeSearch." You can lock SafeSearch by simply going to Search Settings from the Google home page. There is a "SafeSearch filtering" section there, where you can adjust the settings and lock them if you choose. When you lock SafeSearch, you are automatically choosing the "strict" setting (as opposed to moderate). Can Certain Words Get My Content Blocked? People have often wondered if their content is being blocked in SafeSearch if they have certain words on an otherwise family-friendly site. In fact, Google's Matt Cutts recently addressed such concerns in a video at Google's Webmaster Central YouTube channel . "We try to write our algorithm such that just having a single word mentioned here or there really won't have that much of an impact," says Cutts. "Now, of course some words are worse than others. If you've got some slang or something that's misspelled and really is not a word that you can repeat in polite company, that makes it more likely that that page will get flagged. But in most cases you should be in relatively good shape as long as most of your content or most of the words on your page are family-friendly." It stands to reason that if you are producing content that you are hoping that families and children will view, it's in your best interest to keep your language family-friendly. That's pretty much common sense, but Google has put it into a search engine visibility light as well. Related Articles: > Google's Safe Search Filters > Google Won't Remove Pages About You Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged across-the-room, algorithm, from-the-google, misspelled, people, review and story, search, search-filters, slang, youtube | Leave a comment

Spam Will Not Keep You Away from Email

With all of the spam out there and the increasing amount of malice that comes with it, it's easy to look at the situation and think that email must be dying. Combine the overwhelming amounts of inbox spam and the ever-increasing popularity of communication tools like Twitter and Facebook, and you may ask yourself why you even need email. Well, I've got ten answers for you here . Don't get me wrong. Email will evolve. In fact, it's already begun to . But email as a utility is currently in no danger of going away. This is a view that Pro Blogger Darren Rowse appears to have in common with me, as he implied in a recent interview with WebProNews . Rowse notes that email is simply a familiar way to get information , and it's still one of the most popular ways. He offers his blog content via email as a weekly newsletter, and it gets twice as many subscribers as his RSS feeds do. Furthermore, the people getting those email newsletters are even clicking on the ads. As Rowse says, people rely on email. That's not just the old folk either. A recent study found that people between 18 and 24 years of age would rather give up social networks than email. In fact, according to that study, they'd be more likely to give up television . For all of the unwanted marketing messages and spam out there flooding inboxes, email is still the preferred channel of communication by consumers for receiving marketing messages, according to a different survey . Spam is going to flood every channel that achieves the usage of the masses. It's been going on longer than we've had a name for it. As long as I've been alive, I've been forced to sit through commercials I had no interest in seeing, while trying to watch television. Granted, they couldn't give my television a virus, but they have always been intrusive to some extent. Now that social networks are rising to popularity, the spam is sure following there. It's unavoidable. People will spam you no matter what you're using. But you'll still use it. Related Articles: Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged 24 years, commercials, communication tools, facebook, going-on-longer, overwhelming amounts, people, preferred channel, review and story, rowse, social-networks, spam, twitter, weekly newsletter | Leave a comment