Social Media News 8/12/10

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Here’s your weekly recap of recent Social Media News.

Google Wave waves goodbye. In a blog post last week, Google announced that it will no longer continue to develop Google Wave as a stand alone product, citing low user adoption. Instead, Google will utilize some of Wave’s functionality in other projects and maintain some features as open-source code. The ill-fated online collaboration tool was extraordinarily innovative, however many users were at a loss for trying to find practical uses for the technology and how to integrate it into everyday life. This blogger was an early adopter of Wave and an outspoken supporter, however even I found the tool to be worthless when majority of my social contacts were not Wavers themselves. Google Wave had a lot of potential, but with so many existing technologies that allow users to share and collaborate already ingrained into our normal web habits (like email and social networks), there was never a strong enough need for Wave. Further, Wave was not an easy tool to adopt quickly: many users faced a large learning curve in understanding Wave’s functionality, and limited Wave invites at its launch presented a barrier to entry that may have stunted adoption from the onset.

Warm and friendly wins in social. Researchers from Relational Capital Group have studied the science behind making brands more people-friendly that offers strategic insight for social media. Chris Malone writes in a recent Ad Age article about  his team’s psychological study in perception and brand loyalty, and offers three actionable customer service strategies for social media. For more tips on how to connect with your audience in a warm and friendly manner, also check out 5 Ways to Build Your Blog’s Voice from ProBlogger.

MySpace just won’t die. One month after its profile redesign, Myspace is rolling out a new homepage to provide users with more utility and better access to MySpace’s best features. The former social media giant is focused on growing its user network, which includes luring back users that haven’t signed in for years, and specifically targeting 13-34 year olds. The homepage redesign is available to some users in beta, and will be rolling out across all users by August 16. The most important addition to the homepage is the new MySpace Stream, which functions much like the Facebook News Feed providing a feed of friends’ activities, media content, and events. Screenshots are available from Mashable.


Social Media: Strategy

What Are Social Media Good For? Putting a Face to a BrandAdAge

5 Ways to Build Your Blog’s VoiceProBlogger

What Facebook Questions Means for MarketersIgnite

Looking Online to Verify Word-of-Mouth RecommendationsBrandweek

Hot or Not: E-mail Marketing vs. Social-Media MarketingAdAge

Social Media: Consumer Electronics

RIM’s rumored ‘BlackPad’ tablet due in November?Yahoo! News

The Dell Streak Shows The CE World How To Be Relevant In An iDevice WorldCrunchGear

Social Media: Location-Based Services

HOW TO: Visualize All Your Foursquare Check-insMashable

Facebook’s Foursquare competitor is imminentcnet

Groupon + Foursquare = GroupTabs, Group Deals for Check-InsRWW

Digital Advertising

Google Rolls Location-Based Mobile Display AdsBrandweek

Facebook, AOL quietly talking online ad hookupNew York Post

Twitter API to Get Ads Inserted, Revenue to be Shared With DevelopersRWW

Internet Trends

MySpace to revamp site in aim to simplifyYahoo! News

MySpace Launches a Revamped User Homepage [EXCLUSIVE]Mashable

74% of Social Media Users Expect Cries for Help to Be Answered Within an HourRWW

Google & Verizon Propose Enforceable Net NeutralityRWW

RIP Google WaveMashable

Twitter Still Grew 109 Percent In June, Fueled By Global Visitors - TechCrunch


Social Media News 11/25/09

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

(Covering the social news from 11/14 through 11/24)

With 2010 just on the horizon, we’re beginningto hear social media predictions and the new strategies that advertisers will be rolling out next year. Here’s a quote I liked from Chris Bruzzo, VP of brand, content and online at Starbucks: ”People are saying this is going to be a big year for social media and we’re a microcosm of that. Whereas last year it was a curiosity, this year it’s a core part of the program.” Starbucks is planning to cut back on its TV spend and invest quite a bit more in social media. Read about their strategy in this story from Ag Age.

LinkedIn has been busy working on sweeping changes to its features and services. Earlier in the month Social Media News reported LinkedIn’s plans for a homepage redesign and the new ability to link Twitter with LinkedIn updates. On Monday, LinkedIn announced that it will open its API to third party developers, a strategy that has been critical to the rapid success of other social platforms like Facebook and Twitter. Last week, LinkedIn announced a new program for advanced group pages, called Custom Groups. Currently, LinkedIn group pages are little more than discussion forums. With Custom Groups, organizations can transform their group page to a central, multimedia social hub that will allow groups to post videos, white papers and feeds. The program costs $50,000 a month, however LinkedIn will include advertising support to drive traffic to the custom groups. Lastly, LinkedIn and Microsoft are joining forces to sync Outlook contacts with LinkedIn information. In the 2010 release, Outlook users will be able to quickly view LinkedIn user activity and information of their contacts as a subpane of the email window. These are very smart updates to the LinkedIn product offering, and will ensure that LinkedIn becomes an even more powerful business social networking tool for individuals as well as businesses and organizations.

A couple small updates on the Twitter front:

The Twitter Geolocation API has been officially released, however we won’t see anything new on Twitter.com just yet. For now, the release is significant for several third party developers that have built applications that will utilize the Geolocation feature, like Foursquare and Seesmic.

Twitter has also made a small improvement to its new Twitter Lists feature, allowing users to add descriptions to their Lists. It’s a nice-to-have, but personally I can’t wait to see Twitter roll out the ability to search Lists. I believe the lack of a search feature is the single most crippling disadvantage for Twitter Lists.

HootSuite is a Twitter publishing and management tool preferred by many, including myself. New updates launched this week allows HootSuite users to connect their Facebook and LinkedIn accounts for the first time. In addition, HootSuite users can create new columns to pull in their Twitter Lists feeds.

YouTube also released new updates this week:

YouTube Direct is a new platform for professional news organizations to solicit and utilize video content from citizen journalists. It’s an API that news media can incorporate on their existing websites to allow individuals to submit video coverage around current events. The news organization’s moderate can preview submitted material on a backend interface, then choose whether to approve the material to be linked from their site. Get the details from MediaPost.

Google has matched its speech recognition technology with YouTube’s caption feature to unveil a new automated video captioning service. Laurie Sullivan from MediaPost explains how the new service will have a big impact on SEO.

Have a great Thanksgiving holiday!

Ad Age

Behind the Redesign: Virgin.com Mixes Social Activity and Lead Generation

Starbucks Rings in the Holidays With Big Social-Media Push

Bing: an America’s Hottest Brands Case Study

Brands on Twitter: 76% of Accounts Are Infrequent Users

Why Murdoch Can Afford to Leave Google for Bing

Ad Week

Is Facebook Getting Uncool for 18-24s?

Social Media Users Really Are More Social

Brand Sweepstakes Get Twitterized

Media Post

Facebook Targeting Fans’ “Connections”

100 Ways To Measure Social Media

Brightcove Unveils Latest Platform, Integrates Mobile and Social Functionality

Q+A: Razorfish’s Shiv Singh On ‘Social Media For Dummies’

YouTube Unveils Tool To Connect News Organizations With Citizen Journalists

LinkedIn Launches Custom Groups For Marketers

YouTube Automated Captioning Changes Game For SEO

LinkedIn Opens Up To Outside Developers

Mashable

Toys R Us Explodes on Facebook With Black Friday Preview

HootSuite Adds Support for Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter Lists

How Google Wave Is Changing The News

Twitter Lists: Now You Can Add Descriptions!

TechCrunch

Blogging Vs. Microblogging: Twitter’s Global Growth Flattens, While WordPress’ Picks Up

Salesforce Chatter: A Real-Time Social Network For The Enterprise

Microsoft Outlook To Become Even More LinkedIn

Foursquare Continues Its ground Assault With 50 More Cities

Twitter Turns On Location. Not For Twitter.com Just Yet.

Blogs and Other News Sources

Clearing up the Clutter (Smart Marketing)

Chrome Unveiled; Microsoft Cheers (PC World)

Google Unveils Chrome OS; Tech World Yawns (PC World)


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