7Jul/100

Your mom was wrong. You should care what your friends think. And you do.

Social Media and networks like Facebook and Twitter don't seem, to most people, like a threat to Google.

Apparently, there are some researchers inside Google who think differently.  One of these  - perhaps soon to be a former Googler - put together a presentation that is dire in its assessment of Search vs. Social.

Strangely enough, your mom is more like Google than Google would like itself to be.  Google wants you to come and ask its opinion of what to buy, how to drive there, etc.

Facebook (The Facebook Effect: The Inside Story of the Company That Is Connecting the World
) and Twitter are like your friends.  They're constantly interrupting you and making you follow links that might be fun.  Who would you rather be right now?

What this researcher sees is not a mirage.  Increasingly, via comments, tweets, newsfeeds, and product reviews, consumers are sharing their thoughts about products in compelling ways.  In droves, consumers are joining sites and services that provide them the unfettered ability to express their love - or hate - of products and services.  Brands are often defenseless against this, and as the researcher points out, 'Search' is powerless to influence people who don't seek it out.

Brands, in response, are working feverishly to capture the attention of consumers in the most effective way possible. How can they do that?

Get in front of the conversation by enlisting their fans via social groups

Develop Audiences within the ecosystems where the conversations are occurring, like Twitter and Facebook

Let the audiences make the product their own

It's not the static web anymore.

You can't control the dialogue

All you can do is become part of it.

If you don't make it easy for people to follow you, it's hard to be a leader.

6Jul/100

The 360i blog: The inside scoop on LiveIntent interview

360i's Amanda bird can be followed on Twitter @oiseau678

Many thanks this morning to our friends at 360i.

Last week LiveIntent's COO Dave Hendricks sat down on the floor of a Metro North New Haven line train with 360i's Amanda Bird (ala @oiseau678) to answer a few questions about @liveintent.  Actually, Amanda wasn't physically there but she was on email.  And Dave was sitting on the floor of the train for lack of seats.

Here's an excerpt of the article:

[360i]: Currently LiveIntent is very focused on Twitter – do you have plans to work with other social platforms, as well?

[Dave Hendricks]: LiveIntent has planned from the beginning to create a ‘Connections Server’ that presents and recommends the best creators of content, regardless of which service they inhabit. We started with Twitter because it had several characteristics that made it a good place to start. First, Twitter has an excellent API on which to build complementary services. Second, while the concept of ‘following’ was already established, the mechanisms for recommending the best accounts had not been developed. We thought that Twitter’s ‘Suggested User List,’ while generating many followers for the few accounts that it promoted, was not the ideal solution for most users. Twitter users, especially newer ones, are often frustrated and lose interest because they can’t figure out who to follow in order to make Twitter productive and enjoyable. We sought to solve that problem first within Twitter – the Discovery Problem – and then move on recommending the best friends/channels/groups/fan pages on other services like MySpace, YouTube, LinkedIn — and eventually Facebook.

For more, please visit:  Blog.360i.com

18Jun/100

Twitter finally has an ad model…and it’s LiveIntent

The show:  OMMA Social, New York, NY June 17 2010

David Berkowitz, Sr Director of Emerging Media and Innovation at digital agency 360i, moderated a lively panel discussing Twitter's emerging ad model:

After years of waiting, Twitter finally announced its “Promoted Tweets” ad model in April, a system that combines social networking staples like retweeting and replying with some features similar to Google’s wildly successful ad model. What are some of the advertisers and agencies who are currently using Promoted Tweets discovering as they test out the service? What ads resonate, and what don’t, and how will the ads fare when they leave the confines of Twitter search and move out to the tweetstream? And, how will Twitter’s move to ban third parties with similar models affect not only advertisers, but the companies as well? This panel will analyze Twitter’s first attempt at making real money.

LiveIntent's Eric Oldfield took center stage, literally, and shared the microphone with a great panel including, Max Kalehoff, VP, Marketing, Clickable; Derek Rey, VP, Sales & Marketing, Ad.ly and Julie Riven, VP, Consumer Marketing, Bravo Media