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Brent Baltzer

The Key to Creating More Remarkable Connections | Copyblogger - 0 views

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    this is mostly about creating personas from the 1st person perspective, not the third person. Creating a new identity that is a selected version of you. Good stuff.
Carri Bugbee

The surprising truth about who might own your personal social media account | Articles ... - 1 views

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    A federal court in Pennsylvania last week dismissed a lawsuit brought by a former employee who had sued because upon her departure the company changed her LinkedIn password and took over her personal account.
Carri Bugbee

Does Your Content Live In A Mixed-Use Or Gated Community? | Eloqua Blog - 0 views

  • A solid lead generation strategy does both, Craig Rosenberg, author of the blog Funnelholic, told me. The appetite for content online is insatiable so marketers would be wise to indulge the public with registration-free content, Craig says. “I do believe that if people are addicted to content without the reg-path and you path stuff, it better be remarkable.” Rosenberg says the “vast majority” of your marketing funnel should be free without asking potential clients for personal info. Save the registration forms for further down the funnel where more research-heavy content like whitepapers resides.
  • Chris Jablonski, author Emerging Tech blog on ZDNet, who provided the following formula: 10% to 20% fully gated content, 20% to 30% name and email only, and 50% to 70% completely free.
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    Determining a perceived value from a lead can be substantive metric, if somewhat difficult to ascertain. I am imagining it in action. Perhaps you provide an abstract for the content you are guarding behind a registration form. But the abstract is more than a general summary. It includes a bullet list for the specific topics addressed and how solutions are offered, without providing the actual solutions before you collect that personal information. The upside is that you know if a prospect completes the form, they are very concerned about that topic.
Carri Bugbee

The Future of Social Networks - SocialTimes - 0 views

  • the new social model is simply to harvest social signals and sell personalized ads, however and wherever possible.
  • The purpose of Facebook’s upcoming mobile ad network is to sell ads outside of Facebook.com and its mobile app. This “multiple app” strategy often accompanies a network’s own app offerings — in Facebook’s case, Messenger, Facebook Camera and Paper. According to Elgan: If Facebook’s direction or strategy isn’t clear, let me spell it out: Harvest personal data from multiple apps, then sell personalized advertising in multiple locations.   Here’s an oversimplified example: An ad for a Starbucks promotion presented to you in a mobile game (sold through Facebook’s upcoming ad network) might be based on knowledge that you spend a ton of time at Starbucks — information harvested from the Moves app.   As you can see, there’s no Facebook — no social network — involved in this series of events. But Facebook gets paid anyway.
Carri Bugbee

Messaging Manifesto: Consumers Are Tuning Out the Old-Fashioned Brand Strategy of Blast... - 0 views

  • 2,200 consumers worldwide finds that 63 percent of respondents are highly annoyed by the way brands continue to rely on the old-fashioned strategy of blasting generic ad messages repeatedly. The poll found that the two things brands should do to make advertising more appealing to their audiences are to 1) show ads less often, and 2) make the content personalized and relevant based on consumer behavior across other channels and interactions.
  • 78.6 percent of consumers said they are only likely to engage with a brand using coupons or other offers if those promotions are directly tied to how they have interacted with the brand previously. This can include sending offers via email, mobile or social media after they have visited a brand's website or tailoring communications based on products viewed or purchased. The poll was conducted in the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany and Australia.
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    3 percent of respondents are highly annoyed by the way brands continue to rely on the old-fashioned strategy of blasting generic ad messages repeatedly
Carri Bugbee

Marketers Will Seize the Customer Experience by 2020, Study Shows | Virtual-Strategy Ma... - 0 views

  • 86 percent of marketers say they will own the end-to-end customer experience by 2020. To accomplish this, the report found that marketing leaders must have a single view of the customer that allows them to engage in two-way, personalized conversations across technologies, locations, and physical objects.
  • Marketing complexity is growing: More than half of respondents believe the accelerating pace of technological change, mobile lifestyles, and an explosion of potential marketing channels via the Internet of Things (IoT) will change the field the most by 2020. This is driven by the billions of possible interactions these channels will create between a company and its customers.
  • The top marketing channels are those that can be personalized: The top channels to the customer in 2020 will be social media (63% of respondents), the World Wide Web (53%), mobile apps (47%), and mobile web (46%).
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  • Marketing will no longer be just about acquisition: Loyalty and customer acquisition will still be the top two strategic programs for marketing organizations, but by 2020 they are separated from pioneering new and emerging technologies to engage audiences by only 1.6 percent.
  • Innovation will focus on small screens and no screens: Mobile devices and networks (59%), personalization technologies (45%), and IoT (39%) are the three technology-specific trends that will have the biggest impact on marketing organizations by 2020.
  • Raising customer loyalty and better brand perception are the two top benefits (both 53%) marketers aim to realize through a more positive customer experience.
Carri Bugbee

Facebook finally lets brands and publishers into Groups | Digital - Ad Age - 0 views

  • Before now brands and publishers have participated in Groups through the personal accounts of people in their companies.
  • In the past year, as Facebook has tried to fix the platform, it prioritized Groups as a constructive activity on the social network, connecting people on the service in positive ways. Facebook shows more messages from Groups in the News Feed, too, so they have a better chance at reaching people.
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    Facebook announced a slate of new tools, including the ability for Pages to participate in Groups, which are the private communities built around shared interests. Groups have been a feature on Facebook since 2010, but brands' Pages were not allowed to engage with people within their own personal communities.
Carri Bugbee

Lawmakers Probe Facebook Over 'Closed' Medical Groups - 0 views

  • “This consumer complaint raises a number of concerns about Facebook’s privacy policies and practices,” the committee leaders wrote in the letter. “Facebook’s systems lack transparency as to how they are able to gather personal information and synthesize that information into suggestions of relevant medical condition support groups. Labeling these groups as closed or anonymous potentially misled Facebook users into joining these groups and revealing more personal information than they otherwise would have. And Facebook may have failed to properly notify group members that their personal health information may have been accessed by health insurance companies and online bullies, among others.”
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    Facebook misled users who discussed their medical conditions in "closed" groups that they believed to be private and anonymous. But Facebook says users who shared information in these groups should have understood that the social network "is not an anonymous platform."
Carri Bugbee

The Battle for Social Media Authenticity - Forbes - 2 views

  • to a downward spiral, a la Sprint.” The authenticity battle extends beyond businesses and into the world of personal brands, which is a bit of a tightrope walk. On one hand, people are coached to be cautious of what is posted online because it could have long-standing impact, and then, on the other hand, they are told to be themselves.
    • Carri Bugbee
       
      Good point about personal branding and how it fits into strategy ecosystem.
Carri Bugbee

How Instagram's algorithm works | TechCrunch - 0 views

  • Three main factors determine what you see in your Instagram feed:Interest: How much Instagram predicts you’ll care about a post, with higher ranking for what matters to you, determined by past behavior on similar content and potentially machine vision analyzing the actual content of the post.Recency: How recently the post was shared, with prioritization for timely posts over weeks-old ones.Relationship: How close you are to the person who shared it, with higher ranking for people you’ve interacted with a lot in the past on Instagram, such as by commenting on their posts or being tagged together in photos.
  • eyond those core factors, three additional signals that influence rankings are:Frequency: How often you open Instagram, as it will try to show you the best posts since your last visit.Following: If you follow a lot of people, Instagram will be picking from a wider breadth of authors so you might see less of any specific person.Usage: How long you spend on Instagram determines if you’re just seeing the best posts during short sessions, or it’s digging deeper into its catalog if you spend more total time browsing.
  • Instagram is not at this time considering an option to see the old reverse chronological feed because it doesn’t want to add more complexity (users might forget what feed they’re set to), but it is listening to users who dislike the algorithm.Instagram does not hide posts in the feed, and you’ll see everything posted by everyone you follow if you keep scrolling.Feed ranking does not favor the photo or video format universally, but people’s feeds are tuned based on what kind of content they engage with, so if you never stop to watch videos you might see fewer of them.Instagram’s feed doesn’t favor users who use Stories, Live, or other special features of the app.Instagram doesn’t downrank users for posting too frequently or for other specific behaviors, but it might swap in other content in between someone’s if they rapid-fire separate posts.Instagram doesn’t give extra feed presence to personal accounts or business accounts, so switching won’t help your reach.Shadowbanning is not a real thing, and Instagram says it doesn’t hide people’s content for posting too many hashtags or taking other actions.
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    Instagram's feed doesn't favor users who use Stories, Live, or other special features of the app.
Carri Bugbee

The Emoji Is the Birth of a New Type of Language ( - 0 views

  • Fully 92 percent of all people online use emoji now, and one-third of them do so daily. On Instagram, nearly half of the posts contain emoji, a trend that began in 2011 when iOS added an emoji keyboard. Rates soared higher when Android followed suit two years later. Emoji are so popular they’re killing off netspeak. The more we use
  • In essence, we’re watching the birth of a new type of language. Emoji assist in a peculiarly modern task: conveying emotional nuance in short, online utterances. “They’re trying to solve one of the big problems of writing online, which is that you have the words but you don’t have the tone of voice,” as my friend Gretchen McCulloch, a linguist and author, says.
  • Of the 20 most frequently used emoji, nearly all are hearts, smilies, or hand gestures—the ones that emote. In an age of rapid chatter, emoji prevent miscommunication by adding an emotional tenor to cold copy.
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  • when texters finish a conversation, they often trade a few emoji as nonverbal denouement. “You might not have anything else left to say,” Kelly says, “but you want to let the person know that you’re thinking of them.”
  • people are even developing syntax and rules of use for emoji. Schnoebelen found that when we use face emoji, we tend to put them before other objects. If you text about a late flight, you’ll put an unhappy face followed by a plane, not the reverse. In linguistic terms, this is called conveying “stance.” Just as with in-person talk, the expression illustrates our stance before we’ve spoken a word.
Carri Bugbee

ChatterJet surfaces relevant content for small businesses | ZDNet - 1 views

shared by Carri Bugbee on 19 Apr 12 - No Cached
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    Don't have time to find great articles to mention in your blog or on Twitter? This service offers personalized suggestions.
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