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Lorri Mon

Lee Rainie, The social media landscape | Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life... - 0 views

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    Sept 2011: 78% have Internet at home, 61% have broadband at home; 83% of all adults have mobile devices and 73% of adult cell owners use text messaging at least occasionally; 35% own smartphones; 64% of cell phone users send photos or videos and 55% access social networking sites; 60% of cell phone users who are on Twitter use the cell phone to access Twitter. "New media are the new neighborhood." 48% of those active in groups say group has a social networking page on site such as Facebook; 42% say group uses text messaging; 30% say group has own blog; 16% say group uses Twitter.
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    *the new neighborhood is online. How to maintain relationships there? What is the library's role? "Sentry? Evaluator?" *each social network has its own etiquette, thus its own way of bridging and maintaining "social capital" *with the explosion of "creators and niches", how to remain relevant and visible? *if in the "information ecosystem" we are all alone together, then how do libraries fit? Lurking in the background, or always a friendly presence just around the corner? *technology allows the time to better-connected with groups... less effort to maintain social capital
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    as advances in technology increase, so does the importance of social networks in everyday lives. "Together we are more alone than ever" means that as we can carry our networks with us, and latent or weak connections become more important.
Lorri Mon

Mary Madden & Kathryn Zickuhr, "65% of online adults use social networking sites," PEW ... - 1 views

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    Phone interviews in May 2011 with 2,277 adult internet users ages 18 and older p.2 65% of online adults use social networking sites; p3 Of young adult women ages 18-29 who are online, 89% use social networking sites, 69% on an average day. Highest usage skews toward female and younger, but no significant differences in usage by race, household income, geography and education level.
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    -in 2005, 8% of adults used SNSs, now the figure is at 65% -most users rate their SNS experiences as positive *great from a social capital standpoint, as they are more likely to keep accounts active, and pursue weak links in newsfeed -"Young adult women ages 18-29 are the power users of social networking", 89% have accts and 69% access them daily *target young adult women with ads on FB, maybe? use GIS data to appeal to interests of that group, and explain what the library can do for them -more adults are using social networks (driving the avg age of the user up considerably from the imagined age) -"As of May 2011, over eight in ten internet users ages 18-29 use social networking sites (83%), compared with seven in ten 30-49 year-olds (70%), half of 50-64 year-olds (51%), and a third of those age 65 and older (33%)." Positive Negative Neutral Notable (top ten) (top ten) (top ten) (mentioned only once) Good Boring Okay Nosey Fun Confusing Fine Omnipresent Great Frustrating Adequate Hog Wash Interesting Time-consuming Family Glitches Convenient Overwhelming Rarely Vulnerable Excellent Addictive All Right Crowded Easy Annoying Communication Stalking Awesome Addicting Seldom Influence Informative Mediocre Facebook Conformity Useful Overrated Infrequent Befuddled *how to work on changing those negative and neutral to positive associations... how to work the library in as a positive association? Infrequent users can be prompted via opt-in participation to log on and complete activities, post. Process needs to be secure, and easy to use for those who are frustrated with the SNS, etc. Address these concerns and you can generate stron
Miki Wolfe

MySpace and Facebook: Applying the Uses and Gratifications Theory to Exploring Friend-N... - 0 views

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    recheck... can't get the whole article through FSU now
Miki Wolfe

Faces of Facebookers - 0 views

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    -SNSs change the meaning and perception of popularity *popular people maintain/increase popularity while less-popular have a chance to create new identities -perception of attractiveness still matters re profile pic and albums *libraries need to be conscious of brand and marketing. Create a unified brand which is easily recognizable across the SNSs. *visual aspects of the profile are just as key as content. In a world dominated by SNSs, appearance matters -SNSs have also changed people's method and expectations of communication
Miki Wolfe

5 Best Practices for Digital Marketers in 2012 - 1 views

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    1. Own your voice, don't share it *locate and identify key words and phrases to appeal to patrons, don't copy or imitate 2. Resolve to be relevant -five need states: utility, entertainment, information, rewards and recognition *online pyramid of needs? How does it compare to Maslow? 3. Context is King, and Content is Queen -value = creativity + technology *relevant content + context is essential to connect with consumers 4. The Data is smarter, are you? *change the way the data is measured 5. They's changed the channel *98% of 18-24 yr olds use social media *use social media in new ways to catch consumers, and enhance brand prestige/awareness
Miki Wolfe

On the evolution of user interaction in Facebook - 4 views

shared by Miki Wolfe on 01 Oct 11 - No Cached
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    -activity levels of users between one another (connectedness) varies over time, even between close friends -users only interact with a small number of their social links *birthdays tend to be a high number of interactions, because FB posts a bday reminder, making the ease of social connection almost effortless (click, click, post) -"mechanisms of social networks" can affect links in interesting ways, facilitating contact -a minority of users generate the majority of links between users
Miki Wolfe

A Familiar Face(book): Profile Elements as Signals in an Online Social Network - 2 views

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    -profile elements vs social influence: what types of info matter? -verifiable info vs facetious profile information -"Walther's Social Information Processing theory posits that online users compensate for the lack of traditional cues in online environments by looking towards other kinds of cues, such as spelling ability" (436) -online profiles contain many signals, but the viewer has to understand them in order for them to function properly *there's also the converse risk of having an inadvertent signal on the profile *there are clues that are meant, and those that are revealed by accident, and those that are subtle have more value to many people -"Signaling theory: the type of information that can be placed in profiles...profile elements act as signals that may prove something about the identity of the user. These signals can be manipulated by senders to communicate personal qualities, or interpreted by receivers to make judgments about the characteristics of other users" (436) *how do we tell about ourselves to others... and how does a library signal info about itself to not only its patrons but its viewers outside the geographical area -"common ground theory: the motivation of filling out profiles, which is to establish common frames of reference that enhance mutual understanding" (436) *libraries need to identify the needs of their primary users, and reflect these in the profile -"Transaction cost theory: certain profile elements may facilitate the production of shared referents" (436)
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    -due to the social connections of the SNS, the info in profiles can be verified or not, in many cases easily *libraries cannot ever afford to be caught out in a falsehood! -some of the pieces of the profile are not relevant for libraries, or can be whimsical on the page (likes, etc.) Now with the additional of pages, many of these elements are not even present -size of network/friends may help subtly verify other elements to viewers of a profile -generic vs specific knowledge presented in order to garner common ground with viewers of a profile (437) -through the transaction cost theory, finding common ground can reduce social networking time
Miki Wolfe

Boundaries to the Articulation of Possible Selves Through Social Networking Sites: The ... - 0 views

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    not online anymore. Search later.
Lorri Mon

Social Media Infographic 2009/2010 - 1 views

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    Social media statistics in infographic format
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    -FB is top social networking site in 119 out of 134 countries *ubiquity of FB cannot be denied -FB, Youtube and Wikipedia are the 3 top online brands online *all three are user-generated content driven! -Over half of all Twitter users post each day -How people utilize social networks: FB users want community and news; Twitter users want news; Myspace users want games and entertainment; Digg users have mixed interests -The most dominant age group using social media is 35-44 years old (avg age of FB user is 38, Twitter: 39, Myspace: 31, Youtube: 20-35) -daily use of social media networks vary according to networks and needs
Miki Wolfe

6 Ways to Measure Your Social Media Results - 1 views

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    -1. Strategy: measure objectives and potential for insight *Google Analytics *know what your organization has and needs before making social media plans -2. Define success: metrics or goal to achieve *what is a successful campaign/media effort? -3. Identify resources, training and potential obstacles *who can help? What might impede progress? How can these things be avoided/surmounted? -4. Identify tools based on these needs *what exists to help with this? -PR is not a transaction but a relationship. *SMNs help people connect with each other. SMNs can also help brands connect with potential users. -people act and share differently on various social media (FB vs Twitter vs other platforms)
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