Friday, May 27, 2011

Article: Google Unveils Mobile Payments System With Google Offers, Google Wallet

Google Unveils Mobile Payments System With Google Offers, Google Wallet
http://feeds.paidcontent.org/~r/pcorg/~3/mDXsCKFceOs/

Google (NSDQ: GOOG) is getting ready to lift the curtain on its long-planned mobile payments system, which involves turning Android-powered smartphones into an electronic wallet. The deal is kicking off with an agreement with Citibank, Mastercard, First Data, Sprint (NYSE: S) and retail support from Macy’s, Walgreens, Subway and others.

(via Instapaper)

Somehow I am not that excited yet about mobile payments. Are you? Why?

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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Article: Why I Will Never, Ever Hire A "Social Media Expert"

Why I Will Never, Ever Hire A "Social Media Expert"
http://www.businessinsider.com/why-i-will-never-ever-hire-a-social-media-expert-2011-5

Being an expert in social media is like being an expert at taking the bread out of the refrigerator. You might be the best bread-taker-outer in the world, but you know what? The goal is to make an amazing sandwich, and you can’t do that if all you’ve done in your life is taken the bread out of the fridge.

(via Instapaper)

Couldn't agree more with this article! Social media marketing cannot be separated from traditional marketing, it is but a part of it. 

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Tuesday, May 24, 2011

8 Brands That Have Found Success on Facebook & What We Can Learn

Social Media News and Web Tips – Mashable – The Social Media Guide

brand trophy image


Dave Kerpen is the CEO of Likeable, a social media agency that has worked with more than 200 leading brands including 1-800Flowers.com, Verizon and Neutrogena. He is author of Likeable Social Media.

Any brand worth their social media salt has a presence on Facebook. But just because a brand is online, doesn’t necessarily mean that it is doing a good job.

While it’s possible to suggest some tips and best practices, there’s no greater teacher than learning from example.

Below, find eight brands that have found success on Facebook, including some takeaways on what they did right and how you can emulate their success.


1. The Pampered Chef


pampered chef image

The Pampered Chef launched their Facebook page at a national conference in front of thousands of enthusiastic consultants. The page earned 10,000 likes in its first 24 hours and now has over 260,000 likes.

Lesson: Ask your staff, customers, vendors, and partners — who already know you and like you — to “Like” your Facebook page first.


2. Restaurant.com


restaurant image

Restaurant.com combines exclusive Facebook offers with lots of engaging questions. This drives higher results in users’ newsfeeds because of Facebook’s EdgeRank formula. Last week for instance, they asked, “When the weather is nice, do you prefer to dine on the restaurant’s outdoor patio or stay indoors?” and “Which American Idol finalist would you like to dine with — Haley, Lauren, or Scotty?”

Lesson: Ask a lot of questions. You’ll get valuable feedback, plus you’ll be more likely to appear in your fans’ newsfeeds.


3. Oreo


oreo image

Oreo is a global brand with over 19 million fans, and yet they still manage to make things personal for their fans. They consistently run fun content, creative pictures and links. They also have a “World’s Fan of the Week” that showcases one Oreo fan in their profile picture based on uploaded fan photos.

Lesson: Share lots of photos, and ask your fans to share photos. Facebook’s Photos remain the most viral feature of its platform.


4. Vitamin Water


vitamin water image

Vitamin Water has been trailblazing on Facebook for years, including crowdsourcing an entirely new flavor back in 2009. Today, they have over 2.3 million fans with frequent posts featuring pictures, videos, events and links. Most importantly, they are responsive to fan questions and inquiries, breeding loyalty even when their answers aren’t exactly what customers want to hear.

Lesson: Find the resources to respond to your fans questions and inquiries.


5. Boloco


boloco image

Boloco is a Boston restaurant which has set up their Fan Page as a “Place” Page, allowing people to check-in. In addition to using the Reviews app to solicit and showcase reviews, Boloco is engaging and has fun with their audience. Most importantly, as a Place Page, they can leverage one of Facebook’s newest features, Deals, offering customers specific and local specials.

Lesson: If you have a physical location, use Place Pages and Deals to drive traffic through your doors.


6. LOFT


loft image

Last June, LOFT upset its fans after they posted a series of photos of super-thin models wearing their clothing. So the very next day, they apologized and shared photos of their own staff, of various shapes and sizes, wearing the line. Fans responded enthusiastically, and since then LOFT’s Fan Page has grown from 50,000 fans to 250,000 fans. They also post a lot on weekends, when their audience is online and there’s less competition from other brands.

Lesson: Know your audience well, and when you make a mistake, quickly own up, do right by your audience and fix the problem.


7. 1-800-Flowers.com


flowers image

1-800-Flowers.com was one of the first brands to establish buying opportunities inside Facebook, and now leverages in-stream sales. But the most important thing they’ve done is to deeply integrate Facebook onto their website, putting the Like button on all products. Imagine visiting an ecommerce website and seeing what products the person you’re buying a gift for “Liked” — it would make choosing the right gift a lot easier, wouldn’t it?

Lesson: Integrate Facebook outside of your Fan Page, on your website, in as many places as you can. Create more compelling opportunities for people to buy your product based on their friends’ Likes.


8. Brooklyn Museum


brooklyn museum image

This local non-profit has used pictures and an art app called Wall Paper to attract more than 37,000 fans. One thing they do particularly well is engage other entities. A look at their Wall shows lots of artist pages and other organization’s pages interacting with the Museum’s page — not just the fans.

Lesson: Find synergy with other organizations and entities, and then work together to promote each other’s Facebook pages so that everyone benefits.

These eight brands all demonstrate worthwhile lessons in Facebook marketing. What are your favorite brands doing on Facebook? And what other lessons have you learned? Let us know in the comments below.

Disclosure: The Pampered Chef, Restaurant.com and 1-800-Flowers.com are clients of Likeable.


For more lists, how-tos and other resources on this topic, check out Mashable Explore!

Image courtesy of Flickr, Vitó

More About: brand, business, facebook, MARKETING, social media

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Friday, May 6, 2011

How To Hide Recent Activity On Facebook

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Another small tweak to enhance your FB experience.

Article: The Importance of Writing Well For Social Media Content

The Importance of Writing Well For Social Media Content
http://www.socialmediaexplorer.com/social-media-training-2/writing-well-for-social-media/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+SocialMediaExplorer+%28Social+Media+Explorer%29

The skills that make us better explainers, better persuaders, better story tellers, and better thinkers are all fundamentally influenced by writing. These are the skills that allow us to sell our ideas effectively, whether in giving a presentation to potential client, proposing a new project, or convincing customers of the benefit of our newly created product.

Good writing is more important than ever.

(via Instapaper)


Good writing is definitely important, especially in today's content marketing world!

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Thursday, May 5, 2011

Article: 10 Tips for Posting on Your Brand’s Facebook Page

10 Tips for Posting on Your Brand’s Facebook Page
http://mashable.com/2011/03/22/tips-brand-facebook-page/

1. Don’t Automate Your Status Updates

Don’t automatically feed your blog posts or your Twitter updates into your Page. Often, automated content doesn’t make it into users’ News Feeds. Your fans can also distinguish between “auto” posts and customized ones. For a lot of brand pages, auto posts do not engender engagement.

Don’t share the exact same content across all networks (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, etc.) in exactly the same format. We all understand the value of saving time, but respect your customers enough to manually post customized copy. You will get far better engagement and show your fans you care. Some folks who use Facebook don’t really like Twitter and get irritated when they see hashtags or other Twitter-specific content in their Facebook stream.

(via Instapaper)


Very important point that is worth reiterating! I still see a lot of automated posts, even from well-known and experienced websites/brands.

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Sunday, May 1, 2011

Third Party Page Publishing Drops From News Feeds

All Facebook

Over the past couple weeks, many Facebook page administrators who use third party publishing solutions have noticed a downside to using the tools: The hiding of some of their stories.

We first received a note about this happening on one of Facebook’s own pages: Facebook Marketing Solutions (found here).

Mari Smith then noticed the problem as well and published the issue to her own Facebook page (pictured below). We reached out to Facebook to find if this was a bug, but the company told us that this was part of the “aggregation of app stories” which as been around for a while. Anybody using a third party solution to publish out stories should take note.

The only thing you can do in order to avoid this is to manually publish the story to your page. While it’s not the end of the world for page administrators, it definitely decreases the value of many third party tools which are developed to make it easier to manage an entire page.

Over the past week we have seen a decreased volume of story aggregation, but if this remains a common occurrence, manual publishing (something we always recommend) will be even more important.

Readers, please share with us what you’ve observed on the site. And are you planning to switch to manual publishing?

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