Mar
18

Anna’s Social Media Picks of the Week (03/18/11)

by Feedback

My top picks for social media news this week include the buzz around SXSW products, Facebook Deal subscriptions, March Madness, Twitter’s Birthday, and an article on how to get paid news free with a “social loophole.” Read More »

Dec
22

The Young and the Restless: Who Are These People?

by Feedback

In the same year that a major motion picture chronicled (or lampooned, depending on your point-of-view) his college exploits, Time Magazine named Facebook founder & CEO Mark Zuckerberg the 2010 Person of the Year. Meanwhile, having just rejected a reported $6 billion purchase offer from Google, Groupon founder Andrew Mason blithely deflects questions from the Today Show’s Matt Lauer with an aloof mix of nonsense and non sequitur. Neither is yet 30 years old. Both are presumed billionaires. Who ARE these people? Are they the same or total opposite?

Facebook's Zuckerberg

In the run-up to The Social Network, I devoured just about every piece of information I could regarding Zuckerberg and the founding of Facebook, as a means of checking the film from a fact-or-fiction, a Hollywood vs. Reality standpoint.

Likewise, as Groupon entered the local market, uncoincidentally at the same time as major competitor, LivingSocial, I dug into the background of Mason to see if there was another genius college dropout turned visionary CEO story afoot. I can tell you this much with certainty: Mason is no Mark Zuckerberg. Andrew Mason, for his part, does demonstrate clarity of vision, an underrated if unheralded virtue among the young CEO set.

But if you read the biographical profile found in the August 2010 issue of Chicago Magazine, you get the impression it’s Mason’s mentor, local serial entrepreneur Eric Lefkofsky, who is the real visionary. According to the feature, the roots of the whole Groupon idea came from a difficult divorce with a cell phone provider. Believing the angst generated by everyone who’s ever been through such a process could be focused into collective action and, hopefully, community remedy, Mason set to developing a non-profit organizing site called The Point. And while the site attracted a following, it wasn’t attracting investors. When it came to combine collective action with a money-making proposition, Groupon was born.

The rest, as they say, is history.

In tech years, Facebook is no spring chicken, as demonstrated by the fact that your mom, your dad and your grandparents have all figured it out. At a certain point, we’ve gotten to watch Mark Zuckerberg grow, not just as CEO of an indomitable Internet giant, but as a person, as an adolescent into an adult. Only 20 when he co-founded Facebook in 2004, we’ve seen or heard of him for so long, it’s hard to believe that the world’s youngest billionaire would barely be out of grad school had he taken the more traditional path.

A reluctant interviewee early on, Zuckerberg was considered arrogant and standoffish when defending both Facebook’s success and increasingly public missteps. But even as the slings and arrows of privacy concerns and backlash against site changes intensified, nothing has slowed the Facebook train as it cruised past the half-billion user milestone.

Meanwhile, the boy CEO has grown as well, recently appearing on 60 Minutes, ostensibly to announce yet another iteration of the Facebook interface. But what was really on display was a grown up Mark Zuckerberg, ready to put a real public face, not just for his company as they attempt to change and dominate the Internet, but for himself as well.

Groupon's Mason

On the other hand, as a public persona, Andrew Mason seems to be regressing. A Nightline piece a few months ago showed the Groupon CEO as the easygoing boy-next-door his company profile describes, casually tossing out the accolades and reminding everyone that they’ve thrived as new and well-backed imitators spring up around the world on what seems like an hourly basis. Fast-forward to a more recent Today Show interview, where relevant questions were dodged like bullets and Mason’s squirmy, awkward responses indicated a discomfort with the trappings of sudden fame and riches.

For all the perceived arrogance, Zuckerberg has never seemed to shrink from the challenge of running the Internet’s biggest company. It would do Mason well to develop some semblance of that fortitude, or the CEO with the “fastest growing company ever” (according to Forbes magazine) may prove to be too great a mantle to bear.

Naturally, only time will tell the fates of both companies and their suddenly super-rich young CEOs. In a final comparison, it’s worth mentioning that some of Zuckerberg’s most awkward moments with the press were in deflecting buyout and lawsuit talks. Maybe when the conversation about Groupon turns away from Google’s offer and more to the company’s future, Andrew Mason will rebound and find the confidence and grace that Zuckerberg has shown. We shall see. And answer the question from the outset: Who are these people? They’re not like you and me, that seems clear. But while they don’t appear to be on the same plane at this point, it’s possible that they may find more common ground in the future.

Who knows, maybe it’ll be Facebook’s money that is ultimately too much for Groupon to turn down.

-Thomas (@thomasmcdonald)

Nov
19

Anna’s Social Media Picks of the Week (11/19/10)

by Feedback

Do you have time to search the web everyday to find the newest social media tools? If the answer is no, then you have come to the right place. I have searched the World Wide Web for social media information all week, and stumbled upon a few favorites along the way. Here are my picks of the week:

Log in to MySpace with Facebook:

MySpace and Facebook held a joint press conference on Thursday, where they announced that you can now log in to MySpace with Facebook. Being called “Mashup with Facebook,” your Facebook likes and interests will be automatically pulled into your MySpace account, making it easier to connect with entertainers. MySpace is also planning to integrate Facebook’s like button on their social network.

The Beatles Hit iTunes:

If you’re a Beatles fan, you may be excited to hear that Apple announced this week that you can finally purchase Beatles songs and albums on iTunes. Songs cost 1.29 a pop. Visit iTunes to purchase.

Twitter Analytics:

Twitter is testing an analytics tool, which is rumored to debut by the end of 2010. As Mashable reports,

“With Twitter Analytics, users will be able to see a plethora of data about their account; for example, information about which tweets are most successful, which tweets caused people to unfollow, and who the most influential users are that reply and retweet their messages.”

Cool!

Boutiques.com:

Google has introduced a new way to shop this week, debuting boutiques.com. This is a personalized shopping experience, which uses computer vision and machine learning technology to analyze your taste and match to clothing you can purchase. As of now, it is only available for women’s clothing, and is only available in the U.S. and in Canada.

Facebook’s Messaging System:

There are over 4 billion Facebook messages sent each day, which is one of the reasons that this week, Facebook announced a new messaging system. The new messaging system offers seamless messaging, cross-platform conversation history and the social inbox. This is not email according to Zuckerberg, who explained, “Messages is not email. There are no subject lines, no cc, no bcc, and you can send a message by hitting the Enter key.” The system will be rolled out slowly in the next few months.

Aug
27

Anna’s Social Media Picks of the Week (08/27/10)

by Feedback

Do you have time to search the web everyday to find the newest social media tools? If the answer is no, then you have come to the right place. I have searched the World Wide Web for social media information all week, and stumbled upon a few favorites along the way. Here are my picks of the week:

Madison, WI’s ‘Ride the Drive’ with Lance Armstrong
http://www.twitter.com/ridethedrive
http://www.facebook.com/ridethedrive

-Anna (@alucas9)

Aug
10

SOCIAL MEDIA IN THE ABSTRACT: Zynga Has Its Game Face On

by Feedback

As the inspiration for dozens of Facebook groups called “I Don’t Care About Your ______”, some of which have member counts in the hundreds, it would be easy to dismiss Zynga, makers of Farmville, Mafia Wars & Café World among others, as a blight on the social media landscape, an annoyance understood only by those who’ve escaped its grasp. Increasingly, however, industry insiders are seeing real potential in this company and its legion of loyal players.

For the Facebook neophytes and the otherwise uninitiated, Zynga games are played within your web browser on social media sites, taking advantage of those programming platforms to produce surprisingly attractive and endlessly addictive entertainment. Key to the proliferation of these games is the regular posting of in-game ‘achievements’ as status updates, presumably viewable and actionable by one’s friends. If your peers are playing or decide to join with you, the games reward you with some of its specific currency, whether it be gold, sheep or even virtual kitchen equipment. Time is the only cost for some casual fun, but pay options abound for those who find themselves truly enamored with these programs. Everything from additional game currency to visual trinkets to ‘gifts’ for other players can be purchased with cold hard cash, as a means to “augment” one’s playing experience.

As mentioned above, people seem to be all or nothing about the Zynga gaming empire. They’re either completely in love, obsessed to the point of paying real money for pixels on a screen, or consumed by their loathing of these applications, seeing them as aberrations, impediment to whatever they perceive to be their social network’s “true purpose”. What cannot be denied, however, is that a lot of people are playing, 65+ million a day according to Zynga.com, and some mighty big names in the business world have taken notice.

For a company founded just three years ago, Zynga’s numbers are staggering. In late 2009, they reached the 100 million user mark, two years faster than current Internet darling Facebook achieved the feat. While other social media institutions continue to wander in the wilderness in search of a profitable business model, Zynga has been aggressively monetized, to the point of excess in some well-known cases. Zynga is no stranger to the courtroom and founder Mark Pincus has candidly admitted doing anything to become a legitimate business. For his efforts, $520 million dollars in venture capital have flowed through the door, coming from the likes of Internet pioneer Marc Andreesen and search titan Google. If that’s not enough name-dropping, consider high-level strategic partnerships with Yahoo!, Microsoft and MySpace, as well as Facebook and Google. Flagship products like the aforementioned Farmville, Mafia Wars & Zynga Texas Hold’em Poker are now available on the iPhone platform, accessible via iTunes.

The most recent news is that Zynga has acquired a leading Japanese social game studio named Unoh, which will be renamed Zynga Japan. This comes on the heels of a similar purchase in China earlier in the year, as well as acquisitions stateside that have expanded their capacity to continue the steady stream of new games and growing profits. What’s the endgame for a company that’s still a startup by definition? Only time will tell. One thing seems certain, Zynga will be a force in the social media space for some time to come.

As always, I welcome your thoughts and comments, leave them below or email me @ Thomas AT FeedbackAgency DOT com.

- Thomas (@thomasmcdonald)

Aug
06

Anna’s Social Media Picks of the Week (08/06/10)

by Feedback

Do you have time to search the web everyday to find the newest social media tools? If the answer is no, then you have come to the right place. I have searched the World Wide Web for social media information all week, and stumbled upon a few favorites along the way. Here are my picks of the week:

Wave Goodbye..to Google Wave:

On Wednesday, Google announced that they planned to shut down the product next year. One of the most hyped products of 2009 received little attention after its launch. On the Official Google blog, it was explained that despite having “numerous loyal fans, Wave has not seen the user adoption we would have liked.”

The New and Improved Flickr:

Flickr redesigned its photo pages by updating navigation, context and photo size. Flickr now offers:

  • Photos that are are 28% larger
  • Additional navigation buttons above photos and on the sidebar that make for an easier photo viewing experience.
  • “story-sharing,” making it easier to find the who, what, where, when, and why details about a photo.

Social Networking Dominates Our Time Spent Online:

Nielsen stats reveal that social networking now tops any other online activity. In June 2010, 22.7% of our time spent on the web goes to social networking, with the closest rival activity being online games, which is 10.2%. That means that we spend twice as much time on social networks than any other activity.

Customize Your Gowalla:

Gowalla now allows users to customize their passports. They will provide a few themes to choose from, or users can create their own. As Tech Crunch reported, co-founder Josh Williams said “This is part of a series of features we’ll be rolling out in the next couple of months to allow people and brands a greater level of personalization for their passport and spot places.”

Google & Verizon in Talks:

Google and Verizon are in talks about an agreement that would allow content creators to pay Verizon to get their online content to internet users more quickly, and give them higher priority in Google search. This is a big deal, because, as the New York Times reported, “Such an agreement could overthrow a once-sacred tenet of Internet policy known as net neutrality, in which no form of content is favored over another.”

-Anna (@alucas9)

Jun
24

Facebook & The Search For Meaning / Meaning for Search

by Feedback

A must-read article, “Facebook Unleashes Open Graph Search Engine, Declares War On Google” from AllFacebook.com shows how the search worm is turning inside of Facebook, with the importance of “Like” rising as a key variable in search — at least inside of Facebook. This is dreadfully important as a concept.

This very change, as small and undramatic as it has been incorporated, provides a fantastic look into the future of search and the contextual web. Consider how the open display of credibility and validation will change how we find information. We already see the results of that, in theory, in how search already plays out. We assume that the relevance determined by the wizard behind the Google curtain with every click of a “search” button.

Is there an assumed trust that all of those people who find this useful or like something are being sincere and are for real? Certainly, just as we assume when we search now that what appears first is truly relevant (paid ads aside – not that the first unpaid ad hasn’t ostensibly paid to be listed high via optimizing, etc.). AllFacebook.com wonders aloud about “like baiting” as well, but in some ways that still feels less nefarious than engineering a page that has no business showing up so high in a ranking to appear first, even if it actually has no relevance– a practice that happens every day in our typical search.

But then imagine how the actual display of the relevance, such as number of likes, incorporates the, “Is This Review Useful”-ization of the web. In some ways it’s fundementally taking the algorithm away from tinkerers and into the hands of motivated consumers — for good or ill. (And I’m not saying this is a good or bad thing, just fascinated that and how it’s happening.) Facebook wants to create a “social semantic search engine” that essentially runs off of the interactions of people as relevance fuel, not meta data tricks. This very urge and their platform and critical mass of interactions in which to try it means we will have a lot to chew on in the near future as the underpinnings of information display in search give way to new supports.

Google’s caching Tweets and displaying in some first searches. Facebook is listing by Like. Where will we be next year as sentiment creeps not just into our results, but into the algorithm itself?

-Dean (@dbrowell)

Jun
15

Fear & Social Media: The Problem With Place

by Feedback

First off: No unicorns.

The analogy of a unicorn is one I’ve been using for awhile. Even though my company specializes in social media, one of the very first things we try to impress on anyone we work with is to stop treating it like it’s so special. So unique. So weirdly fantastic. Because the more we romanticize it, the more unattainable and unusual it feels. The more we trick ourselves into essentially not understanding it. It becomes this amazing unicorn, and while we stare at it up on the hill, we barely notice all of the unicorns standing at the bottom of the hill around us.

So many professionals have spent so much time fearing or idolizing social media that they’ve failed to notice how ubiquitous and “baked in” it has become. With all of the navel-gazing, they failed to realize that everyone else had incorporated social media into their daily lives, into every interaction. Perhaps it was never that separate for the average consumer to begin with. Suddenly surveys are splitting hairs about whether people “use” social media to make X or Y decisions without noticing that everyone’s using a form of social media for every decision—they just aren’t bothering to CALL it “social media.” Anymore than I say, “I am about to write my friend an electronic mail which I will thrust through the internets in order to communicate thoughts from afar!” The idea of social media is NOT new. Anymore than AOL messageboards or phone party lines are new.

Which brings us to place.

Currently there’s quite a lot of buzz over “check-in” applications such as Foursquare, PlacePop, SCVNGR, Gowalla and Hot Potato. People stumble a bit in sometimes claiming that this wave of geolocation is somehow the start of the trend, but it’s myopic to claim geolocation is in its infancy. It’s certainly not when you consider how long Google Maps, Google Reviews, Brightkite and Mapquest has been around. We have to be careful to not ignore the emphasis that GPS and place has had on search in the last ten years and only focus on the Foursquare vs Gowalla.

By treating geolocation as so special we bundle its effects into something to lift up or be scared of. We watch as institutions wonder aloud whether they should partake in it… as though the only way to partake was to dive completely in. I think there’s some low-hanging fruit that worth pointing out to both the managers struggling with what Foursquare is and the C-suite who may be unusually enamored or scared of it. It’s simply worth just taking the time to ensure that your college buildings, hospital, wellness centers, retail locations, etc. are just listed in these apps. With Foursquare in particular, someone has to add a location- they aren’t automatically there like in SCVNGR (which is pre-populated with Google Places data) or MyTown (which uses CityPages). Nevermind if you have the money or inclination to engage, do sponsored badges, etc. – but are you even listed so that someone could check in? Or perhaps listed incorrectly? Are you there and people are already talking about you? A good analogy is really the old use of the phone book. There’s buying into a Yellow Pages ad program, but there’s also just making sure you appear in it and appear correctly.

But if we treat geolocation as a unicorn, we miss the opportunity to simply be found. And when did we treat our address as so special?

The apps themselves are often more in tune with the shortcomings of locations than the locations themselves are. In our recent research on event tourism with the a music festival we found some interesting benefits and problems with Bonnaroo’s official use of Foursquare (we’ll be elaborating a bit on the blog and  in a full-throated report soon, free to our clients) while other check-in apps didn’t even have a single central location to check-in at.

PlacePop worked diligently to try and add one when we spoke to them, and kudos for them for taking the effort and responding to Feedback’s open worry, but what would have simply helped was for the institution of a massive music festival that becomes Tennessee’s fourth-largest city in a weekend to have taken the initiative to simply have their address in the phone-book that is the top 5-10 apps.

There’s much more, from ensuring our photos and videos are properly associated with place and more… The concept of place is so much bigger than just check-ins. It’s someone needing something and asking a search engine of any sort, be it the augmented reality view of a camera phone held aloft to simply a Google Maps search from an iPhone. We’ve recently seen maternity wards being reviewed on apps like Yelp, traditionally the app of restaurants, for goodness sakes! How long before we realize the consumer isn’t waiting for the institution to get on board or not?

The overall issue of place is as old as the phone book. It’s as old as maps. It’s as old as grave markers of any sort. The check-in-app of old was simply the letter sent back home to tell family that we made it to the new land. Now I let select friends know I’ve landed with a click, or I can flip through the virtual catalog of places, opinions, ideas and opportunities, without having to write or interact myself, just to find a great place to eat, or raise a family, or hear some music.

So. Beware of unicorns.  :)

-Dean (@dbrowell)