Mar
19

Anna’s Social Media Picks of the Week – From Times Square (03/19/10)

by Feedback

Do you have time to search the web everyday to find the newest and coolest social media tools? If the answer is no, then you have come to the right place. (& if the answer is yes, leave a comment with your favorites). I have searched the World Wide Web for social media information all week, and stumbled upon a few favorites along the way. & this week I’m doing my picks from Times Square in NYC!

@Anywhere:

At SXSW Twitter announced the @anywhere platform, but did not give us any insight into their advertising model. @anywhere is an app that will allow people to access Twitter information on any site on the Internet.

Facebook Search:

This week Facebook announced an update to their search capabilities that uses the search bar to incorporate more relevant results based on your networks connections.

Location Battle:

SXSW interactive was all about the location apps, specifically Gowalla and Foursquare. Both were used a ton at SXSW but it was Gowalla that beat out the competition in the SXSW web awards winning for the mobile category.

March Madness Apps:

March Madness top 24 started on Thursday so for all you sports fans, I have some app recommendations for you so you don’t miss the scores. If you’re in a tournament there are apps such as ESPN Tournament Challenge where you can check your standing, there’s also tons of free apps to keep up with the scores such as NCAA’s March Madness On Demand Lite App.

Facebook # 1:

Reports came out this week from HitWise that Facebook beat out Google as the most visited site for the week ending March 13th. This is the first time Facebook has beat our Google, becoming the most visited and most popular U.S. website

-Anna (@alucas9)

Mar
09

Radio Free Feedback

by Feedback

Radio Free Feedback is Born!

Radio Free Feedback is our musical experiment, featuring musician friends, up-and-comers we can help highlight, observed acts of musical lunacy and more. We will occasionally feature musicians in our offices as well as out on the road, sometimes themed and sometimes just jamming. If you’re interested in being featured or hanging out, contact us through the info at the bottom of the page or click here.

Radio Free Feedback 1: Featuring Dave Tinney!

Thanks to everyone who tuned in live and in-person! The recorded show is in full below, check out and fan our Facebook Page for video clips, photos and more:

-Dean (@dbrowell) on behalf of the Feedback crew, old and new

Mar
03

New Clients On Stage: Feedback’s Client Roster & More

by Feedback

We’re beaming over here with new clients, super-interesting research and incredible partners lining up to make 2010 a banner year already. And over Twitter today we announced, “We can see clearly now, another new national client!”

Often people ask: “But Feedback, how come you don’t trumpet every new client or have a giant client list clearly displayed on your website?”

The answer is simple: It’s not about us. We generally don’t publicize our clients because often we are working behind the scenes. We have all sorts of relationships with agencies, firms, consultants and even a few direct clients. And while with some we are incredibly visible, in others we’re not. In our company’s life so far we have worked with a roster of national and international clients as well as firms of all shapes and sizes (located in major cities around the US as well as many here in our home state of Virginia). We have taken on many different industries such as healthcare, automotive, education, craft brewing, technology, incredibly localized communities and more. We’re able to share some names and will if you’re interested, just drop us an email (contact at feedbackagency.com) or call (804-893-3437). But for now we’ll just be us engaging with all of you on here  thankyouverymuch.

All that said, every now and then we’ll tease out some good vibes as we grow. The great thing is, this wasn’t even the only good news this week. We’d like to thank all of our amazing partners, friends, fans and followers as well as warn them: Hold onto your hats, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.

-Dean (@dbrowell) on behalf of the Feedback crew, old and new

Feb
24

The Millennials & Technology: Don’t (Completely) Believe The Hype

by Feedback

This article, “‘Millennials’ an always on, texting generation” and it’s subsequent sub-headline, “Technology’s role is key distinction for those born after 1980, report finds”  is worth the read, if you’re cautious of the hype. This article, and a few recent ones like it from USAToday and others, is on the money, but just because Millennial’s think technology is their defining trait doesn’t make it exactly so.

Every generation might arguably exclaim that technology in some way defines them, especially in eras following massive booms in industrial progress (cars, planes, plastics, microchips). What we need to be careful of is stopping the introspection there (and to be fair, it’s the rest of this article, from , “It’s Not Just About Gadgets” onward that does better service). It’s how Millennials USE technology and how it affects their perceptions and behavior that truly defines the unique traits. It’s not as though other generations aren’t utilizing the same technology. (Arguably, “technology” shouldn’t be the unique trait of a generation at age 25 unless that kid was born in a vat and their parents weren’t.) I know 30 and 40-something executives that are as much a slave to their Blackberry and iPhone as any teen is to their texting phone.

Also, be careful to note they say the Millennial is anyone born after 1980- that’s a huge 30-year swath… I’d say 1980-2000 and be cautious enough to note that there are some radically different concepts of authenticity and privacy among those being brought up now vs. those 30 years old right now.

-Dean (@dbrowell)

Feb
19

Dean & Jeff Take Over Anna’s Social Media Picks of the Week (02/19/10)

by Feedback

Do you have time to search the web everyday to find the newest and coolest social media tools? YES. If the answer is no, then you have come to the right place. Anna JEFF AND DEAN searched the World Wide Web for social media information all week, and stumbled upon a few favorites along the way. Here are my OUR picks of the week, hosted by Dean Browell (and EXTRA CREDIT POINTS to those who identify where our intro noise reference comes from):

Robble Robble:

One of the funniest critiques of the Foursquare “check in” craze we’ve seen… As people Tweet that they are at a location, PleaseRobMe.com aggregates those check-ins to make the point that you just admitted you aren’t home.

Facebook #2 in Visits, #1 in Attention/Engagement:

Maybe this whole social media thing is just a fad… But probably not. Looks like it’s truly becoming what the web just is in some ways. Facebook just overtook Yahoo for the #2 spot for website with the most visits and if you’re looking at pure attention and engagement it’s already #1.

PR vs. Social Media:

Kevin Smith’s embarrassing Southwest Airline problem turned into a he-said-she-said that proved doubly embarrassing for the airline who not only erred in their original judgement against Smith, but in multiple attempts to clean up their mess online. It exemplified the power of the Tweet and the helplessness of PR spin when up against social media. Need a better example? Richmond has it’s own going on right now.

Simple Tourism on Foursquare:

There’s a great article on how destinations can use Foursquare to market themselves. I love the one about helping visitors fulfill their “bucket lists” in particular.

BONUS - Facebook | New Privacy Controls for Your Applications:

Facebook might be a bit of a mess right now, but at least we can keep our friend’s Farmville Zombie Mafia Ninja’s out more effectively.

Don’t have any sympathy for Anna, she’s where the photo above was taken. We’re busy putting her mouse in a jello mold.

Dean (@dbrowell) &  Jeff (@ideaman)

for Anna (@alucas9)

Feb
16

Talk To The People First: How Apple, Google & Facebook Blew It

by Feedback

The last few weeks has not been kind to three of the world’s most innovative tech companies, but one could argue: you did it to yourself.

The big three in question, Apple, Google and Facebook, all had relatively good news to share (iPad, Buzz, and a new look for Home, respectively), reasons to be happy and new products and features. There was no Toyota-like tail to tuck between legs and no reason to think that by traipsing out in front of the crowd that there would be anything but cheers. That is, unless they had actually asked anyone outside their company ahead of time about what they were about to do. Maybe then they’d have a glimpse of the near-future.

Underestimating Your Undercut
The reception to Apple‘s iPad has oscillated between wide-eyed wonder and, “you’ve got to be kidding” with a dash of, “looks cool but I’m reasonably sure that’s for old men.” But this story is not about the iPad itself. In fact while you still get some mainstream media Twittering on the tablet, the real critique is going on about the Flash debate. Both onstage and off Apple has been sharpening its sword to go after the Adobe Flash issue, swearing by the constant crashes and closed system it presents, hoping to migrate the universe (or at least Apple-controlled space) toward a Flashless existence. However by trying to point at that pot the kettle can also be seen and the closed-system of Apple’s world, combined with their want to control everything has been on a different stage for all to see. It’s been the theater equivalent of the curtain opening too early and seeing the director strangling a dramaturge.

What has secrecy wrought?
In an era where people try and keep things tight-lipped, the iPad and Buzz were no real secret. We knew Apple and Google ether were or would drop something like these things at some point, but they obviously maintained a vice-like grip on details. Too bad, because once we got past the, “okay, that’s what we thought” stage, the internets converged on what was actually presented and pounced like a pack of wolves.

The death of the Beta Test?
And when Google reached a swollen, wounded hand up from the fray, what was so astonishing was that a company that should completely know better, that had usually teased out features to anyone who would have them via Labs for years, had been eaten completely by the crowd. How bad was it? A company like Google was having to make face-saving changes to Buzz before the ink had dried on their own press releases. There were performance problems, privacy flaws (serious ones) and more.

Look, when there’s even a reality show where the prize is to be a game tester (no matter how sad that concept is) there is at least a transparency now about the product development process that can and should include some amount of user beating before things go to market. Again, it’s not like these products were secret to begin with.

Great News! We All Use Your Service & Know How Bad It Performs
Which brings us to Facebook. Seriously. By now you should know better than anyone. Never mind that they eased in their new look complete with some very bizarre choices (Video is hidden under photo? Huh?), what was happening under the hood was even more disturbing. Debuting before the Super Bowl meant that the News Feed issues that accompanied the big game could be masked by the high-volume of users (right?) – but when the News Feed problems persisted into the week after, we all smelled an issue. Worse still, it looks like Facebook has been trying to monkey with the problem by adding a strangely draconian solution, the, “oh by-the-way-we-haven’t-been-showing-you-your-friends” revelation that most of us have been limited to seeing only a fraction of our friends in the News Feed lately – and Facebook picked which friends. Meanwhile administrators have noticed that some Pages have gone unpublished and then suddenly published again and we have all witnessed strange slowdowns in updates, views and communications with other services. Really Facebook? I know you’re big now, but this is an awfully systemic bunch of bugs. You never gave us a FailWhale to look at, you just make us think you’re working right until we notice things aren’t updating. At least I know when to leave Twitter alone.

Honorable Mention
Speaking of Twitter, you’re on notice too for falling down so much. What is it, 2008 again? Please go make some revenue so we can have more dependable servers and can see “Old Posts” again.

Solution?
I can’t believe this is something we should have to tell some of the most respected (and social) companies in the world but: LISTEN. Roll it out, stress test it. Privacy test it. Don’t just let mock-ups speak for you, let your product roll around in some hands. In some of these cases we’re talking about some very obvious issues: philosophies of privacy, basic volume-handling, old arguments with renewed ammo. We know the excuses. “But it crashes Safari!” “But it’s exactly what we need!” “But we’re free so don’t complain!” Screamed with all the rigor of Gollum’s, “It burns usss!” We appreciate you’re not thrilled with our response, but don’t pat us on the head, just listen and change.

-Dean (@dbrowell)

Feb
05

New Facebook Design: Where In The World Is…?

by Feedback

By now a large portion of Facebook users are seeing the new homepage redesign as it is slowly rolled out to everyone.

While it is cleaner and makes more productive use of the top bar (at the same time making it thinner) it tucks and tweaks some features. I won’t go as far as to say things have been made hard to reach, but rather placed in some locations that we’re not quite used to. In at least one instance I’ll point out though, one feature has been peculiarly hidden.

Here’s the new bar:

Note the icons now near the Facebook logo representing Friend Requests, Messages, and Notifications. (Try and look past the fact that the “Messages” icon is more reminiscent of what most iconography uses for “chat” functions.) These icons bring your Friend Requests and Inbox interaction to closer parity with Notifications, where a drop-down gives you a preview of what’s waiting for you and a red-number indicator of new items.

At all times you can still get “Home” and to your profile with the righthand links.

Right, but where did my “Friends” go?

This is a harder question to answer. In some ways, finding friends and seeing lists is simple, living in the lefthand column like this:

But very quickly those of you who use Friends Lists may notice that from here you can’t get to that page where your friends were all lined up next to your lists and you could easily edit who was in what lists, etc.

So, where is that page now? It’s accessible in the drop down on the upper right- under “Account.”

There you’ll find, “Edit Friends,” as well as all of your other preferences, settings, privacy options and more. Convenient that they are all grouped like that, but odd that I can do an awful lot with my friends as individuals and lists over on the left-hand except for access this one page.

Let’s look at that left-hand list again:

Some of these are redundant considering the same icons live in the top bar. But it looks like one big one is missing: where’s video?

Here it is:

It’s under… photos? This would be the most boneheaded navigation change in my opinion. As strange as the Apple/Mac reality that iTunes (a music program) plays video but iPhoto does not. Video needs its own icon. Period.

Strangely enough in this lefthand menu you can’t delete or move around every icon – only some of them. (I can get rid of Ads & Pages if I want, but not Games?)

All in all, most of the new changes make logical sense, but they’ll still take some getting used to.

-Dean (@dbrowell)

Jan
25

Doomed to Hate Twitter: A Richmond Story

by Feedback

Interesting how it takes polarizing viewpoints to sometimes find the more nuanced center. Richmond BizSense’s Aaron Kremer, with the unsurprisingly shocking title, “Why I still hate Twitter” recounts how he went from being booed about his stance to proving himself right. (Meaning: he went from “hate” to “still hate.”)

Full disclosure: I use Twitter. I am not always a very frequent user and I tend to go in spurts based on subject, speaking with audiophiles during Bonnaroo season, consumer electronics around CES, social media news and my adventures in fatherhood pretty constantly. Also, I sometimes advocate the use of Twitter by businesses when it is appropriate. There are lots of reasons to dive in if your targets are there, and especially if their influencers are (the latter being the most important when you consider Twitter’s recent effect on SEO and that many Twitterers send their posts to Facebook as status updates, further making a Tweet sail to readers). Similarly there are many reasons you might not want to engage in Twitter, from a lack of targets to time to engage and more.

I applaud Kremer’s tackling of the subject and his courage to dive in despite his publicly unpopular preconceptions. What I find strange is the way he set up his test case. He followed only 50 people.

After stopping at 50 people he concludes:

My study is complete, and it’s just as I thought: a waste of time and completely useless for business unless you want to reach lots of marketing people.

Now, if you just look at the top 50 Twitterers in Richmond according to Twitter Grader, you’ll see that it is filled with marketers. That’s a complaint I have of Twitter in our town as well, but it’s the price you pay for being a major southeastern city with one of the nation’s top advertising agencies – the marketing culture will be early and voracious adopters.

But that top 50 list is also filled with Kremer’s media competition, local businesses and more. Lists curated by other Richmond media sources peg hundreds of frequent local Twitterers, the majority of which aren’t marketers from what I can tell. A new local business, presumably the target of BizSense, seems to join Twitter every week. Here’s two different lists by RichmondGL that contain nearly 900 Richmond Twitterers.

So it’s a statistical marvel that in three months he, “did not find one helpful piece of information that I could use for a news story or even something that made me smile.” I’m not sure what three months he was on, whether he saw the way Richmond took to Twitter during the Ukrops sale, Flying Squirrels, or if he ever noticed that every morning Twitter spreads links of his news stories. Maybe it takes a lot to make him smile.

His comments on the experience, or more pointedly his comments on his opinion (he doesn’t actually detail his experience past a few sentences) belie a focus only on his strange sample of the Richmond scene. He claims it’s for “teens” and yet Richmond teens are minority of our local Twitter culture – I would venture to guess that the local pet culture online is even a stronger presence.

The good news is, Twitter is just a potential channel, just like BizSense and email publications are. Many local entities have found regional, state and national benefit using current internet culture as a driver for sales. I think I just expected a more thorough (and less inflammatory) “study” by BizSense considering they are a publication based in that other medium used by teens, “email.”

UPDATE: I think everyone should see for themselves what his “study” looked like here. Certainly there wasn’t any Tweeting for three months straight (not even consecutive months) and his last Tweet was in October of last year. Only twenty-nine Tweets total, most in June and July, one in August and then the four in October. No conversations with other people. More to his blog post’s point, here’s his list of 49 he followed.

I posted a comment that hasn’t been approved (or was deleted) in reference to all of the comments on the original story:

I’m not sure which is more hilarious, that we’re debating the usefulness of a tactical medium, or that we’re doing it on something tagged, “blog” on the website of an email newsletter of news story links, where all of the respondents have written short-form responses while standing agape and pointing at this horrible Twitter concept full of short form responses that frequently link to blogs, news stories and newsletters.

If the signal of a medium is to be judged against the noise, I’m pretty sure BizSense doesn’t want to have that fight inside the realm of email.

Pot, Tweet Kettle.

-Dean (@dbrowell)

P.S. I guess this is why BizSense didn’t pay any mind to my want to get Richmond’s business adoption of social media as a story worthy of year-end focus. :)

Jan
07

Facebook’s 3.1 iPhone App Update Explained

by Feedback

Last night many iPhones were able to update to the new Facebook 3.1 version of the free iPhone software. AllFacebook.com reports the Facebook iPhone app has a stunning  ”23.5 million monthly active users and over 11 million daily active users.”

Among the features added were push notifications and contact syncing. What does that look like and mean? Read on…

Push Push Push

Before you will be able to have anything pushed to your iPhone, your Push Notifications have to be turned on.

You’ll find those in your Settings app here:

You find the Push option hiding in your Settings app, after selecting Facebook.

And here’s what the settings look like:

For right now I don’t need to be bugged all the time, so for the important stuff I’ll let them ping me.

A Syncing Feeling

Back inside the Facebook app itself, click on Friends and you’ll notice a new button that says “Sync” in the upper right:

This takes you to a screen with two options. I feel this is slightly misleading since I haven’t found any evidence that having “Replace Photos” turned on by itself actually does anything – you have to have Syncing on in order for that slider to be meaningful (which is a shame, because I can certainly see wanting my photos to be replaced without any other data transfer between my Facebook and Contacts).

When you slide the button over to the on position for Syncing, the following warning pops up:

That warning is where I have a problem. While I know the concept of “syncing” means I’ll have to share information between at least two points what this warning suggests, without any explanation, is that my Contacts on my iPhone will be sent up to Facebook. It doesn’t just say, “your contacts who you are currently friends with” but broadly just says, “contacts from your device.” That’s a little odd and potentially disconcerting. If they aren’t my friends on Facebook but I have them in my Contacts, does it suggest them as friends? Does it ping or bug them? Does it try and contact people who are friends to tell them their phone number is wrong? The truth is it may do none of those things and might just harmlessly confirm that yes, they are my friends but I don’t know that for sure and with just that simple phrasing in there, I’m not inclined to try it just to have some people tapped on the shoulder by me when I don’t mean them to.  Furthermore, I’m not guaranteed Facebook will check with me when there is a conflict in information like Apple’s MobileMe does at whatever threshold you set it at. I do know people who don’t always make sure their contact info is super-up-to-date on Facebook (many don’t bother with their basic profile info after they first write it, in fact).

It’s a great update from a functionality perspective, and casual users will get a lot of use. But on the Sync addition, there’s just a bit more assurance needed, in my opinion, before I go merging my Facebook database with the one I really depend on — not because of privacy or nefarious big brother reasons any more than the simple trust in people to have one or both fully up to speed and the fear the “correct” info won’t be what’s left after the sync.

-Dean (@dbrowell)

Jan
06

Social Media & The Mouse: Part 3 – The Fury of the Visit

by Feedback

A brief series on the creativity and innovation consumers are taking advantage of when vacationing at a resort such as Walt Disney World. Based on my own experiences in researching, testing and using the online culture of user-and-small-biz generated message boards and iPhone applications.  Parts 1 & 2 here.

The Trip

Life is often too fast to be too connected. We enjoyed ourselves at Disney, at the expense of what is usually a set of social media channels used for constant Twittering and updating. In this trip’s case I might light the occasional candle of an update midday, but for the most part my feeds were public ghost towns. Part of this was the plan to not broadcast we weren’t at home, but part of it was a conscious effort to not feel inclined to spend a vacation staring down at my iPhone.

One of my favorite photos, quickly taken with the iPhone from the Teacup ride at WDW

I still used my iPhone, primarily as a quick-camera and the occasional video-recorder as well as the hub for about a dozen apps. But it was infrequent use only and not as a reporting device. At night, well-after my daughter went to sleep, I plugged back into the online world to download photos and video and pick a few key shots to share with friends and family. I had created a designated Friends List on Facebook to share our vacation with only a select group, so that any photos uploaded to that album had a certain set of privacy filters applied. On the last day I lifted most of those filters so everyone could see the whole albums. But except for those evening excursions I stayed relatively disconnected.  Call it the joy of moderately unplugging.

Consumer Needs, Consumer Life

While there I was under the spell of the many iPhone apps I had, even as the potential for far more mobile interaction and engagement laid before me. There were so many applications I could have used if they existed: ones that used augmented reality to show me the best spots for parades, an app for tracking my Fast Passes, and what I really wanted from Disney: an app that let me browse the PhotoPass photos I had accumulated.

It’s not hard to daydream what could be with the technologies available to the general consumer right now. Using the new geolocation capabilities of Twitter there are certainly opportunities to interact “out loud” with people in the park. We should be encouraged to update our public albums and pass on deals to our wide networks while we’re on these trips. Bus routes, ride times, Disney Dining Plan tracking and any number of basic information.

Which I think is part of the frustrating reality for consumers at tourism destinations these days: they often arrive to find that they are farther advanced than the destinations themselves. While I saw plenty of people reading Kindles on the buses, kids with DSi’s and every family with at least one smartphone, there were tens of thousands of connected people all creating their own networks and realities despite the lack of interaction prompted by the destination itself. Their information never gets transferred past the networks that they themselves create. You can see how these entirely separate communities and spheres of influence have been able to flourish (like All Ears, DisBoards, DisneyDaddy blog, and others). The information available on these destinations and the related ephemera is completely splintered. And the base websites created by the destinations themselves are sometimes the last places we go. I don’t want to just see a restaurant’s menu, I want opinions on it. I don’t want to know a ride exists, I know that, I want the real tips they’d never tell me on the main website (such as targeting and point-grabbing tips for Toy Story Midway Mania). Many times during our trip I felt myself enjoying the destination but staying tethered to these kinds of communities because they exponentially enhanced my experience through shared experiences and decision making – something the destination wasn’t participating in. I was enjoying the destination despite itself.

I could have easily interacted with dozens of apps and sites and both read and written thousands of words in support, critique and chronicling my experience – and never once contributed to or interacted with the actual destination. That should scare destinations that aren’t participating in their consumers lives.

Does this mean the destination needs to get in the community-building business? Not necessarily. But knowing exactly how savvy your population is and at least matching it with features and awareness is an absolute must right now.

-Dean (@dbrowell)