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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Pedro Gonçalves

Pedro Gonçalves

Google's Top 2013 Search Terms In Asia Hint At Online Trends That Might Go Global | Tec... - 0 views

  • Attack of Titans. In addition to Japan, it was also a top 10 search term in Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan. Combined, the results meant that searches for the show trended higher globally than Mad Men or Homeland combined.
  • its popularity in Asia helped the valuation of its maker, GungHo Online Entertainment, which TechCrunch’s Kim-Mai Cutler profiled in June, soar to as much as 1.546 trillion yen, briefly overtaking Nintendo’s market cap.
  • In Taiwan, MMORPG Fantasy Frontier was a major hit. An English-language version called Aura Kingdom will be launched soon.
Pedro Gonçalves

Sweden's Advertisers Warm to Content Marketing - eMarketer - 0 views

  • A majority of Sweden’s advertisers now use some form of content marketing to enhance their brands
  • While 69% of those polled said they knew what content marketing was, nearly one-quarter (23%) said they had heard of it but didn’t know about it.
  • Among marketers who had content strategies, 80% said that form of marketing was at least somewhat effective at strengthening their brand, and a similar number said it nurtured existing customer relationships. More than half said it was effective for finding new customers. It was less good at generating direct sales, according to this sample.
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  • Nearly all the advertisers polled (92%) said they aimed content marketing at their customers, and 54% targeted prospects. Six in 10 also created content designed for journalists or others in the media. The most popular approach—mentioned by 65%— involved placing content on both print and digital platforms, while 43% used only digital channels.
  • Facebook was the runaway winner when it came to distributing branded content; 84% of advertisers said they had used it, and a further 11% planned to do so in the future.
  • More than three-quarters (78%) of those polled said they had produced newsletters, and 12% intended to do so, while 74% had posted content on properties such as partner websites. Pinterest was one of the least compelling propositions for these advertisers. Just 8% said they had used it to post content, and 3% planned to do so; 73% said they weren’t even considering it at the moment. Despite the growing enthusiasm for content marketing, content-related budgets remain rather low, judging by this research. More than two in five respondents (42%) reported that their company spent less than SEK1 million ($147,711) on these initiatives, and 24% spent between SEK1 million and SEK5 million ($738,552). Yet only 6% said they had no funds at all for content marketing. In another vote of confidence for content, 53% of advertisers said their content budgets would increase in 2014.
Pedro Gonçalves

Maioria do tráfego na Internet não é feito por humanos - Expresso.pt - 0 views

  • De todo o tráfego gerado este ano na Internet, 61,5% não foi feito por pessoas, mas sim por bots
  • Em comparação com o ano anterior é possível constatar um aumento de 21% no tráfego total de bots
  • Uma grande parte destes bots, 20,5%, correspondem a perfis falsos de pessoas que tentam interagir com os utilizadores através das redes sociais.
Pedro Gonçalves

61 Languages Found On Twitter. Here's How They Rank In Popularity. - 0 views

  • English tops as the number one language on the microblogging platform, with Japanese, Spanish, Malay, and Portuguese rounding out the top five, respectively.
  • the majority of activity on Twitter comes from the United States. In June 2013, 3.7 billion Tweets were sent from the country with Japan coming in second with 1.8 billion. However, in looking at the number of active Twitter users worldwide by quarter, in Q3 2013, the US had approximately 50 million active accounts compared to the remaining 182 million from around the world.
Pedro Gonçalves

Want To Get More Retweets? Try Doing This (And This, And This) ⚙ Co.Labs ⚙ co... - 0 views

  • Although peak Twitter hours coincide with the workday, retweets are actually higher during our off hours. On average, we retweet more on Sundays than we do on any other day of the week, and Twitter sees more retweet activity from 10-11 p.m. than it does for the rest of the day. Hashtags and at-replies help: The use of hashtags and at-replies was also found to have a positive effect on the amount of times a tweet would be retweeted.
  • tweets with images are almost 25% more likely to get retweeted--an increase from .404 retweets/1K followers to .496 retweets.
  • tweeting in all caps will net you .8 retweets on average per 1,000 followers, as opposed to tweets with only one-tenth of their text in caps, which averages out to .147 retweets per 1,000 followers.
Pedro Gonçalves

Gmail To Marketers: Drop Dead - ReadWrite - 0 views

  • Google on Thursday updated its Gmail service so that you'll never have to click that pesky “Display images below” link again. Gmail will now automatically display images in email, the catch being that Google will host those images on its own servers. Prior to the change, most emailed images would be loaded from third-party servers—often enough, those of marketers.
  • But by filtering these photos through its own servers, however, Google may have shut out the use of Web bugs or beacons—bits of code that lets an advertiser know that an email has been opened. Marketers use images as beacons because, at least until now, services like Gmail would upload such images from an advertiser’s own web server. Any image can be a beacon, even an invisible one no more than a pixel wide.
  • the following likely consequences for his audience: Marketers won't be able to tell whether you've opened an email for the second or subsequent time Web bugs won't report reliable geolocations for opened emails, as they'll pick up the IP addresses of Gmail servers, not recipients Countdown clocks sent as animated images won't show the right time if email is opened a second or subsequent time Analytics will only track the first time an email is opened Marketers won't be able to update or change images once they're sent out
Pedro Gonçalves

Publishers Nervously Await The Facebook "Correction" - 0 views

  • Recent changes to Facebook’s News Feed algorithms have lavished online publishers with unprecedented referral traffic, creating a ripple effect throughout the news industry. In September, stately newspaper sites set a digital traffic record, seeing an 11% gain in visitors since June, while Facebook referrals from BuzzFeed’s diverse partner network of sites increased by 69% from August to October.
  • But traffic-bound publishers are growing anxious that yet another algorithm change could erase the big gains of the last few months — that traffic could disappear just as quickly as it came. “We’re starting to get very nervous,” one staffer at a major paper told BuzzFeed. “It’s scary that they can get everyone hooked on such high referral traffic then take it away so quickly with a quick flip of their algorithm,”
  • “They’re gonna keep tinkering with the algorithm, so I expect the referral surge will taper off. I’m not worried, though. Facebook has a hundred billion reasons why they need to support ‘high-quality content,’ which means they won’t abandon publishers anytime soon.”
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  • At the very least, Facebook’s decision to move beyond treating all “likes” as equal has introduced a new sense of instability. Publishers are beginning to regard Facebook less as a system to be figured out, or gamed, than an ever-changing mystery. A strong ally, until it isn’t. “We went up for one of their summit things a few weeks ago and we got the sense they didn’t even really know how this massive beast they have actually works,” one staffer at a major magazine told BuzzFeed of News Feed’s influence. “And that they can make or break entire companies.”
Pedro Gonçalves

The Post-PC Era Begins In Earnest Next Year - ReadWrite - 0 views

  • To date, there are still more installed PCs in the world than there are smartphones or tablets. Next year, that's likely to change.  According to projections from mobile analyst Ben Evans, the number of smartphones in use around the world will pass that of PCs for the first time next year. According to a chart from Evans, the estimate of installed PCs in the world is a little north of 1.6 billion. The global install base of smartphones is near 1.3 billion and growing at a much faster clip than PCs. If you add tablets into the equation (with a tick more than 200 million installed across the world) then mobile devices are almost on par with PCs already. Evans predicts that the total number of installed smartphones in the world will eclipse PCs in 2014 sometime in the second quarter.
  • IDC predicts that 314.2 million PCs (desktop and laptop/notebook) will be shipped in 2013, down from 349.4 in 2012. That is a 10.1% shortfall year-over-year, the biggest single year drop in PC history.  On the other end, smartphones are predicted to eclipse one billion shipments this year. IDC shows smartphone shipment growth of 39.3% year-over-year with little sign of slowing down.
  • IDC predicts that 1.7 billion smartphones will ship in 2017, versus estimated PC shipments of 305.1 million. Shipments, of course, don't equal sales of actual devices to consumers. It is also important to note that even sales do not mean an addition to the installed base, as many as older models are replaced by newer ones. In aggregate, the install base rises over time—just not at the rate of shipments or sales. 
Pedro Gonçalves

7 Critical Mistakes You're (Almost Certainly) Making On Social Media | Fast Company | B... - 0 views

  • “Marketers are on social media to sell stuff,” Vaynerchuk says. “Consumers, however, are not … If you want to talk to people while they consume their entertainment, you have to be their entertainment.” If users are on Instagram to see beautiful pictures, don’t interrupt their experience by posting a picture of a coupon. Instead, post a beautiful picture of your product in a picturesque setting.
  • hashtags are like waves--and the best way to surf is to ride the wave, not create it. “You’re not single-handedly getting a hashtag to trend on Twitter unless you’re the Biebs,” Vaynerchuk wrote on his blog. “On the flip side, your ability to pay attention to what’s going on and jump into it, over-indexing the performance of a normal tweet, is pretty consistent even for people who are somewhat average social media users.”
Pedro Gonçalves

Facebook: Pages may see organic reach decline - Inside Facebook - 0 views

  • The site posted on its Facebook for Business blog that pages will likely soon see a decrease in organic reach as a result of recent changes to the News Feed algorithm.
  • People are connecting and sharing more than ever. On a given day, when someone visits News Feed, there are an average of 1,5001 possible stories we can show. As a result, competition for each News Feed story is increasing. Because the content in News Feed is always changing, and we’re seeing more people sharing more content, Pages will likely see changes in distribution. For many Pages, this includes a decline in organic reach. We expect this trend to continue as the competition for each story remains strong and we focus on quality. Facebook notes that page admins can try advertising and boosting posts to make up for the loss in reach: As the dynamic nature of News Feed continues to follow people’s patterns of sharing, Page owners should continue using the most effective strategy to reach the right people: a combination of engaging Page posts and advertising to promote your message more broadly. Advertising lets Pages reach the fans they already have and find new customers as well.
Pedro Gonçalves

Should You Be Ditching A Ton Of Your Facebook Fans? Here's Why Burger King Did Just Tha... - 0 views

  • Back in April, the fast feeder was re-launching its Facebook page and in an effort to get a fresh start, offered all of the followers of its previous page a free Big Mac to not join the new page (giving away up to 1,000 Big Macs). The rationale: the brand had low engagement and a lot of fans whose activity consisted of making negative cracks and asking for discounts. In the wake of the stunt, about two-thirds, or 28,000, of its Facebook fans took up the offer, leaving just 8,000 fans on the new page.
  • Burger King Scandinavia marketing director Sven Hars stands by the decision to prioritize quality over quantity. "This campaign gave us the opportunity to get rid of all the fans that just liked us because of freebies," says Hars. "We stopped focusing on how many likes we had, and put time and resources into finding out what to talk about and how to engage our fans."
Pedro Gonçalves

Behavior-Based Anticipatory Computing Coming To Social Networks - ReadWrite - 0 views

  • By aggregating personal data and preferences based on your check-ins, applications can begin to tailor suggestions for you, effectively driving decision-making and transactions. 
  • With Foursquare’s latest iOS update, the company is continuing its vision of telling you where to go next, not just where you are.
  • Foursquare is rolling out push notification recommendations and an application redesign that makes it easier for users to find out what’s happening around them.
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  • Foursquare will only provide notifications that are relevant to you personally. The application learns your behavior based on previous check-ins and recommendations. You won’t get notifications everywhere you go; rather, when you’re at a restaurant, Foursquare will crawl the tips and if there is one that fits your profile, you will be notified. Additionally, a new swipeable carousel of suggestions at the top of the application’s home page will show location-based suggestions, such as deals around the corner or something saved to your to-do list nearby. 
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