What The New York Times Web Reboot Gets Right | Co.Design | business + design - 0 views
Why Facebook Pages Are Seeing Lower Organic Reach, And What They Can Do About It - AllF... - 0 views
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Facebook’s algorithm uses a number of factors to establish which posts should be shown to users. Previously called EdgeRank, the algorithm now has more than 1,000 contributing factors, but it still focuses on three main influences: affinity, weight, and Time.
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Affinity is defined by a user’s relationship with the person or page that created the specific Facebook object — essentially how much the user interacts with that person or page.
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Time, the last major factor, takes into account how recent the action occurred, which, in Facebook vernacular, is called time decay.
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Multiscreening Distracts TV Viewing in the UK - eMarketer - 0 views
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UK TV viewers are not as focused as they once were on the gogglebox, according to new research from BT (British Telecom), which suggested almost eight in 10 (78%) now perform other activities while watching the tube.
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Forty-seven percent of respondents checked email, 37% shopped and 36% used social media. Multiscreening is very much a common activity in the UK now, and those with a smart device or laptop are more likely to veer toward a second screen during ad breaks.
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While the proliferation of smartphones and tablets has undoubtedly spurred viewers to multitask during TV time, July 2013 polling by Deloitte found that the preferred device to use while watching TV was neither the smartphone nor the tablet, but the laptop.
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Report: Flipboard-like Facebook reader coming this month - Inside Facebook - 0 views
The Scientifically Proven Way To Get Your Kickstarter Project Funded | Co.Design | busi... - 0 views
Startup Lisboa - 0 views
O "abandono" das redes sociais - Briefing - 0 views
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Mais de um em quatro utilizadores de redes sociais deixou de usar alguma rede social nos últimos 12 meses, ou seja, 27 por cento do total dos utilizadores. Os resultados constam do estudo "Os Portugueses e as Redes Sociais", do grupo Marktest.
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O número sobe para 31 por cento aos analisarmos a faixa etária dos jovens entre os 15 e os 24 anos, o grupo demográfico mais aberto à mudança.
Infographic: Facebook image dimensions - Inside Facebook - 0 views
News Feed algorithm tweak: Status updates from pages moving down - Inside Facebook - 0 views
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The social network decided that since status updates from pages behave differently than photo, video and link posts, they should be treated differently. While users may see more status updates from friends, pages may see a decline in reach for these types of posts, writes Facebook’s Chris Turitzin, Product Manager, News Feed Ranking:
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Page admins can expect a decrease in the distribution of their text status updates, but they may see some increases in engagement and distribution for other story types.
Is Squarespace's New Logo Generator A Design Crime? | Co.Design | business + design - 0 views
Communications, Social Networking Among Top Smartphone Activities in Western Europe - e... - 0 views
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In 2014, internet penetration in the main Western European markets will continue to vary substantially, from 58.0% and 64.0% in Italy and Spain, respectively, to more than 74% in France and Germany.
Facebook continues to dominate social referrals - Inside Facebook - 0 views
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Since September, referrals from Facebook have grown 48.85 percent, and represented 17.41 percent of all website referrals in November.
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The findings were based on 200,000 websites from around the world, accounting for more than 250 million unique visitors each month.
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Last month, this behemoth of a social network drove more than twice the referrals all 7 of the other social media platforms sent to sites, combined.
People Prefer Big, Interruptive Web Ads | Adweek - 0 views
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While the online ad industry falls deeper in love with native ads that fade into the background of Web pages, consumers prefer ads that get in their face by taking over their computer screens. At least, that’s according to a new study on high-impact ads conducted by Ipsos ASI on behalf of Undertone.
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It’s perhaps not surprising that Undertone and Ipsos found bigger ads drove more brand recall, since consumers are likely to remember big ads that interrupt their Web surfing. But it is surprising that respondents said they liked full-screen takeovers the best. These ads received likability scores that were 30 to 49 percent higher than standard display units, according to Undertone
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One word of caution: This study primarily focuses on display ads—that is, it compared high-impact display ads with standard banners. Native was not part of the research. It would be interesting to see what consumers thought of native ads vs. full-screen takeovers, if given the choice.
Facebook Hilariously Debunks Princeton Study Saying It Will Lose 80% Of Users | TechCrunch - 0 views
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Last week Princeton researchers released a widely covered study saying Facebook would lose 80% of its users by 2015-2017. But now Facebook’s data scientists have turned the study’s silly “correlation equals causation” methodology of tracking Google search volume against it to show Princeton would lose all of its students by 2021.
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the critical error in the non-peer-reviewed study is stating that since the volume of searches for “Facebook” began declining in 2012, it must mean there’s an ongoing decline in Facebook usage. Yeah, no. Back in Facebook’s web heyday around 2007, many people did surf to the social network by searching for “Facebook” or “Facebook login.” But then this thing called mobile came along and people started getting to Facebook by opening an app, not searching for a website. So searches for “Facebook” declining doesn’t prove much considering over half of Facebook’s traffic now comes from mobile. Since 2012 Facebook has kept growing to its current 1.19 billion users, and it has never had an overall decline in user count.
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