Tag Archives: social-networking

Animators Collaborate on Facebook All the Way to the Theaters

Last fall, Mass Animation , which calls itself the largest global animation collaboration ever, posted an invitation on Facebook for artists around the world to collaborate on the making of an animated short film. This film is now getting a theatrical release this week with Columbia Pictures' Planet 51 release. It's called "Live Music." "When artists arrived at Mass Animation's virtual studio on Facebook, they were given the essential tools and animation software necessary to participate, including individual storyboards and 3D models bundled for download along with guidelines on animation," a representative for Facebook tells WebProNews. "Through the social networking features of the application, animated shots could then be viewed, voted on and shared with friends." "'Live Music' reflects the input of Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged animate characters, animation, collaboration efforts, dc comics, dc fans, facebook, marketing, online-game, review and story, social-networking, universe, world | Leave a comment

Who We Are On The Social Web

I'm a different person at work than I am at home. I tell different jokes. I have different stories. I share different experiences with different people in different ways depending on a host of different factors (e.g., how well we know each other; where we went to school; what our shared interests may be, etc.). The context in which I know people is different from one person, one situation to the next. By and large, this is a good thing. I wouldn't want my co-workers to know all that my wife knows and my wife wouldn't be interested in all that my co-workers know. Not surprisingly, online these relationships play out differently through different social networks. As a fairly engaged social networker (and dork), I recently tested my own social networks for what I'm calling, "social overlap" – the percent of overlapping "friends and followers" I have between the three social networks I am engaged in most: Facebook, Linkedin and Twitter. (I highly recommend doing this exercise yourself, it shows a number of revealing insights about yourself. Here are some of mine. I'd love to hear your findings in the comments . This analysis shows how few of my contacts overlap between different social networking platforms. This online fact echoes my offline reality of having different kinds of relationships with different people depending on the context of how we know one another. My own lack of "social overlap" is complemented by a recent report from Forrester. Analyst Jeremiah Owyang (who recently left the company) suggests , "Today's social experience is disjointed because consumers have separate identities in each social network they visit." Owyang goes on to say, "This creates friction for consumers who must now manage multiplying personal information and username/password combinations." As a solution to this "friction" Owyang predicts that people will bring a single online identity from one social network to the next. Early examples of this prediction coming to light are "Facebook Connect," which allows users to "connect" their Facebook identity to any site, and "Open ID," a potential social network standard for a shared identity system. However, a single online ID seems out of synch with how we (or at least I) naturally relate to others in our offline/real world lives. Maybe I like having different platforms on which to interact with co-workers vs. family members. Maybe I'm not comfortable showing the same side of me to everyone I know, regardless of how I know them. Maybe my lack of "social overlap" online is a good thing...much as it is offline. The point here is not to knock a single online ID, it's to ask bigger questions about who we are on the social web. How are we different consumers in different contexts? What permission do we give different brands on different sites? How does your brand fit in with your customers on Facebook differently than it does on Twitter? Because it's not just a different tool, it may be a "different person" with whom you're connecting. These questions point to the critical need to listen first before coming to market with a social media strategy. To understand how your customers think of your brand, product or service as relevant and meaningful in different social media contexts. Because maybe your customers are not the same people in one context that they are in another. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged analysis, customers, exercise, facebook, linkedin, networking, online, review and story, single-online, social, social web, social-media, social-networking, twitter | Leave a comment

Yahoo Launches Spanish Version of Mobile Home Page

Yahoo has launched Yahoo Mobile in Spanish. This is a Spanish-language version of the Yahoo Mobile home page, which is customized specifically for U.S. Hispanic consumers, and is available on over 1,900 devices. "By bringing together U.S. Hispanic consumers' favorite content and services from across the Internet, Yahoo! Mobile en Espa Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged advertising, internet, languages, largest-country, mobile search, relevant content, rica latina, social-networking, u s census, weather stocks, well-as-instant, yahoo, yahoo-mobile | Leave a comment

Facebook User Count Now 325 Million (Or More)

On September 15th, Mark Zuckerberg announced that Facebook "now serves 300 million people across the world." Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged advertising statistics, america, Business, comscore, impressive-fact, nbsp, networking, population, related articles, seven weeks, social-networking, uncharted territory, widely-used, worship-it-more | Leave a comment

Social Networking Donation Cause Leaves MySpace For Facebook

Causes is a social networking donation platform that uses MySpace so that people can raise money for causes or issues that they believe in. Generally these kinds of activities help provide a community around issues like Breast Cancer, or stop smoking, or other issues that are part of our daily life. Causes is an excellent application that makes the process of raising and donating money for a specific cause very easy and embeddable into someone’s MySpace page. Last night according to ReadWriteWeb and Stanford Social Innovation Review , Causes has sent an e-mail out to all their MySpace members stating that they will be moving over to Facebook and no longer supporting MySpace. I do not see why they could not do both, but apparently Causes does not want to support both platforms. From a business viewpoint – Causes would be very smart to provide support for both platforms; everyone needs a simple easy way to donate to the cause they believe in. Stanford Social Innovation Review though also brings up the specter of money, in that it is well known that Facebook caters to a richer clientele than MySpace. Going out to Quanticast – the demographics for MySpace and Facebook makes this a compelling argument. MySpace Demographics: Facebook Demographics: What is interesting about the Quanticast information is on the right side data pane where people who are likely to visit Facebook, Causes shows up as the number one entry in the likely to visit category. Where on the likely to visit column causes does not even show up. Demographics are also telling – people are much less likely to be college educated on MySpace, meaning they just simply do not make a lot of money. However, some research points out that poor people donate more overall money to causes that influence their groups or their interest groups than rich people do. The problem also might be in the micropayments processing side; small amounts of money usually are quickly degraded by mounting fees from payment processors, handling, and movement than larger payments, which is a definite possibility and, one of the drawbacks to the micropayment system. What is sad though is that rather than supporting both platforms, which is just good business, Causes has decided to abandon MySpace in favor of Facebook. Regardless of the reason, from a business viewpoint you don’t abandon a channel until it stops being profitable, if Causes believes that MySpace is no longer profitable, then there is more here about the internal workings and visitor counts of MySpace than we generally have discussed in the blogging world, let alone the press. Causes definitely needs to post a statement on their blog, so we know what the reason is, rather than speculating as to what the reasons are. Comments Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged interest groups, members, micropayments, myspace, raise money, review, review and story, social-networking, stanford, stanford-social | Leave a comment

Online Retailers To Have Better Holiday Season

Overall retail sales are expected to show no gain this holiday shopping season, while online retail sales in the U.S. will reach $44.7 billion during the holiday season, an eight percent increase over last year, according to a new report by Forrester Research. The growth rate represents an increase from 2008, when, on the heels of the global financial crisis, online holiday retail sales in the U.S. grew just five percent. Forrester defines the holiday shopping season as months of November and December. "Despite the lingering effects of the recession, the online space remains the retail industry's growth engine," said Sucharita Mulpuru, Forrester Research vice president and principal analyst. Sucharita Mulpuru "What's different this holiday from past years is that online retailers will manage to the bottom line, which will change some of the tactics they have employed in the past." The National Retail Federation has forecast a one percent decline in overall U.S. holiday retail sales for this year. A recent Forrester survey of more than 4,000 U.S. online consumers found that 94 percent of those who made a purchase online within the past three months plan to continue to buy online this holiday season. Nearly three- quarters (72%) of retailers surveyed in "The State Of Retailing Online," a Shop.org study done by Forrester in Q3 of this year, say they expect online holiday sales to increase over last year. According to Forrester, retailers will cut down on automatic free shipping and require price thresholds to qualify for free shipping. In addition, online retailers will use more cross-channel customer service options, advanced merchandizing software that will offer more product information, and improved social networking tools that will allow people to share purchase decisions with friends. "Tighter offline inventories may benefit the online channel as consumers go to the Web looking for products - and prices - they can't find in stores this holiday," said Mulpuru. "Online retailers will be ready for them with a special focus this year on engagement and service." Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged Business, customer service options, forrester, forrester research, global financial crisis, holiday, holiday sales, holiday season, recession, retail-sales, social-networking, sucharita-mulpuru, year | Leave a comment

Social Networks Don’t Waste Time, People Do.

Social Media policies of well-known organizations often appear in the news with commentary throughout the Blogosphere, the Twitterverse, etc. There is an ongoing debate about just how restricted social networks should be when it comes to employee use. Bloxx , based in the UK, has released some research finding that 90% of IT Managers surveyed believe access to social networking site should be banned or restricted. 90%. That's a lot. The managers surveyed came from across the UK public sector as well as private organizations. The concerns addressed in this survey were the usual suspects: staff productivity, network security risks, and damage to the corporate reputation. Productivity was by far the top concern. What is your top concern with employee social network use? Discuss here . The research found that not only Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged 30 minutes, corporate reputation, eamonn, media-policies, network-security, networks, private organizations, review and story, social-networking, social-networks, telephone, uk businesses, usual suspects | Leave a comment