Online

This week, Nielsen plans to launch its new “Online Campaign Ratings” system that tracks ad performance and audience demographics thanks to data from a partnership with Facebook. It will allow advertisers to pay for similar insights into their web campaigns as Nielsen provides for their television commercials, such as reach, frequency, and gross rating points, as well as anonymized biographical data such as age, gender, and location.

Reliable, granular, third-party campaign measurement could help advertisers improve ad targeting and gain the confidence about the impact of their ads necessary to shift spend online and away from television. The data could convince advertisers to choose Facebook because they can actually target based on this same audience demographic data.

Some users may be alarmed about being tracked through their Facebook data, but advertisers are only see the same data through OCR as they see when buying ads on Facebook, and GigaOm reports that users will be able to opt out.

Here’s how Nielsen’s Online Campaign Ratings system works:

  1. Advertisers tag their ad with a Nielsen code snippet
  2. Facebook records when logged in users view tagged ads on Facebook.com or other sites
  3. Nielsen tracks where an ad is being seen and how often
  4. Facebook’s anonymized, aggregate audience demographic data is combined with Nielsen’s impression data
  5. Advertisers receive reports within days about the performance of their ad campaign

Niether Nielsen or Facebook gain access to all the data at any point, protecting the privacy of those tracked. Users don’t volunteer or get paid for being tracked the way they do for contributing to Nielsen TV ratings, but they don’t have to take any action, just browse normally.

Nielsen first announced plans for OCR in September. It also pulls demographic data from other media companies and publishers, and has been testing OCR since March with over 20 brands including Proctor & Gamble and Publicis Groupe S.A.’s Starcom MediaVest.

Early tests showed that OCR could track 42% of impressions of a given ad, while traditional panel sample online ad tracking methodology typically only tracked 3%. OCR was also able to determine what percentage of an ad’s impressions were reaching the target audience.

By contributing its data, Facebook is betting on the high performance of it’s own advertising product. It may hope to show Facebook Ads more frequently reach their intended targets and are correlated with better downstream conversion rates. The site would also benefit from a general reallocation of advertising spend to online display from TV.

Nielsen and Facebook had previously partnered to run Nielsen-designed polling ads on the Facebook home page. These BrandLift poll ads helped advertisers determine whether an ad campaign had increased purchase intent.


Source: Inside Facebook

Facebook has returned to showing users their complete buddy list in Chat with the addition of a “More Online Friends” section. Now users see their closest and recently interacted with friends at the top of the Chat buddy list, and can independently scroll down the Chat bar to view the online statuses of all remaining friends. Update: The change has since been confirmed by the Facebook Twitter account.

Facebook redesigned its instant messaging system last month such that instead of showing the online status of all of a user’s friends, it only showed around 20 of a user’s closest or most recently interacted with friends. The only way to determine the online status of other friends was search. Some users complained, and we wrote an article discussing the merits of being able to easily Chat with all friends, even distant acquaintances.

The change will allow users to quickly start conversations with the friends they Chat with most, but still be able to send Chats to the rest of their friends without conducting time consuming individual searches. The modification also shows Facebook is listening to feedback on product changes, despite some believing it ignores its users.

Typically when Facebook changes its interface, a small but vocal minority denounces it and demands Facebook revert to an older version. Often it’s not so much that the functionality is worse, but that it’s different than users are accustomed to and they don’t want to adopt a new behavior pattern. But with so many users and a readily available medium for sharing their discontent, a fraction of the user base can make it seem like there is larger disapproval.

Facebook has come to expect this, giving users time to adjust and looking at the actual usage data before considering whether additional changes are necessary. It famously watched hundreds of thousands of users protest the addition of the news feed to the home page, only to see it become one of the site’s most popular features.

In this case, though, press criticism, analysis of the design, and possibly the data pointed to users preferring the option to see the online status of all of their friends without having to search one-by-one. Users now get the best parts of both the old design and recent redesign: prominent access to their closest friends alongside options to scroll through all their friends and search for particular ones.

The re-redesign should be especially helpful for users with large numbers of friends that had many hidden from view in the previous design. It will help users reconnect with those they don’t interact with often, and make it easier to know who could be invited to an ad hoc group chat.

Users may also notice a new mobile phone icon next to some friends. This indicates that person is available to chat via Facebook’s new standalone push notification-delivered group chat iPhone and Android app Facebook Messenger, or the Chat-enabled primary Facebook mobile apps like Facebook for iPhone or BlackBerry. The icon will help users determine that it may be better to send shorter, simple messages rather than links or attachments that are more difficult to consume via mobile device.

The addition of “More Online Friends” to Chat should serve to improve Facebook’s relations with its users. It could rally users to be more vocal about future redesigns in hopes of attaining a similar outcome, but at least they know Facebook isn’t deaf to the opinions of those it serves.

[Thanks to Kevin Evanetski for being the first to tip us to this.]


Source: Inside Facebook

Since the Skype Video Calling and Chat redesign launch a month ago, you may have noticed something missing from your Facebook home page. The Facebook Chat buddy list now only shows you the online status of a subset of your closest or most recently interacted with friends, around 20 on a screen of average size and resolution. You can only determine if the rest of your friends are available to Chat by searching for them one by one.

The redesign makes a bad tradeoff. Quick access to Chat with best friends is helpful, but search is far too inefficient a method of determining the online status of other friends. It’s unlikely that users will ever strike up a casual conversation with anyone outside of the buddy list. This is unfortunate, because it’s the ability to stay in touch more distant acquaintances that makes Facebook special.

We asked Facebook why Chat has been redesigned like this, and Director of Product Peter Deng told us, “The goal of the new design is to give more people faster access to the friends they message most. Looking at the early data of how people are engaging with and using Chat, things are moving in this direction.”

Sure, people spend most of their time Chatting with close friends or people they frequently need to exchange information with, such as co-workers or teammates. The new design makes it very easy to start talking with a friend whose wall you recently posted on, profile you’ve been perusing, or that you Chatted with yesterday.

The intelligent sorting algorithm isn’t perfect, though. For example, I see friends I haven’t interacted with in months, while best friends, people I frequently see in person, and those who’ve recently Liked my status updates remain hidden. With time the algorithm could improve, but now if I’m visiting New York City and want to ask several local friends where I should go for lunch, searching one-by-one to see if they’re online is a ton of work. I’ll probably forget to search for someone who might have the recommendation I need.

A quick glance at the unfiltered Chat buddy list on one of Facebook’s mobile apps reveals the friends that are missing, that I might have asked for advice or invited to dinner if it wasn’t so difficult to figure out if they were available to Chat.

The relevance-filtered buddy list is an especially big problem for users with abnormally high friend counts. Facebook says the average user has 130 friends (though we hear it’s closer to 180 now), and for those people perhaps only a handful of online friends don’t appear on the buddy list. If a use has 500 or 1000 friends, though, the number of missing friends is much more significant, recalling names from such a large set is difficult, and searching one friend at time takes far too long to be feasible.

Its these power users and early adopters that are posting updates, tagging photos, and driving total time on site for Facebook. These are the same people that could lead their graphs to another social network if they got fed up with Facebook, so it’s in the site’s interest to keep them happy.

Facebook should implement a combination of the relevance-filtered and complete buddy list, similar to how the news feed has tabs for Top News and Most Recent. The site has considered ways of eliminating the tabbed news feed because some users never leave the default Top News tab, but the buddy list is not an endless stream, it can be easily displayed in its entirety.

By default, the tabbed buddy list could show users the relevance-filtered list, so the most frequent Chat use cases wouldn’t require any buddy list scrolling to initiate. Then let users click to view their full buddy list. Search could be left in to help those with massive buddy lists, or scrapped for a cleaner design.

With a global user base topping 750 million that includes social butterflies and grandparents just looking to share with their kids, pleasing everyone is no simple task. More options make things more complicated, so in most situations, design that work for the majority are best. But when sleek, algorithmic-focused design creates more friction than it removes, one extra link or button may be the answer. In this case, I hope the answer is “See all online friends”.


Source: Inside Facebook

If you are a local business looking to ramp up your online marketing campaign, the following strategies will help you get ahead of competitors in your region by putting your business in front of targeted online visitors in both local search and social media.

1. Optimize your website for local search.

Your first goal should be to optimize your own website for local search, and don’t worry – there are only a few minor changes you need to get started. These include the following.

  • Place your local street address and phone number on every page of your website. If you do nothing else with your website in terms of local search optimization, make sure you do this. It not only helps with customer usability so they don’t have to hunt down your address, but it tells search engines that you are a local business. Also, be sure your address and phone number are in text format and not in an image – search engines can’t read images.
  • Create a contact us page with all of your local information. It’s not enough to just have the information on each page. Having a good contact us page which includes your business’ photo (such as the outside or inside of the building), street address, phone number, fax number, contact form, email address, and a map (see these directions on how to embed a Google map on your website) will help customers find you easily and add more strength to your local listing.
  • If you have more than one location, create a page on your website for each location. These pages don’t have to be too complex and can just include the same items as listed above – like a contact page for each location.
  • Create a KML location file. Want to get even more advanced into your local search optimization? Have your webmaster create a KML location file to display geographic data for Google Earth, Google Maps, and Google Maps for mobile. Read more about how to create these files in Google’s KML Tutorial.

Now that your on-site optimization is more locally focused, we can move on to some offsite optimization and geo-focused branding.

2. Claim your listing on Google, Yahoo, and Bing.

This is another one of those “if you do nothing else” strategies. Be sure that you claim your listing on the top three search engines’ local directories: Google, Bing, and Yahoo.

Google Places

To claim a Google Places listing, you will need to sign into your Google account (if you have Gmail, Adsense, Adwords, Analytics, etc. then you have one), or create a Google account if you don’t already have one.

You can then search for your listing on Google Maps and click on the link at the top right above the map that says Business owner?.

If you cannot find your listing, you may need to create one from scratch on Google Places.

Once you’ve created, claimed and verified your listing (Google will call you with an automated message and code or send you a postcard), you will want to fill out your profile with as many details as possible including photos and videos.

Bing

To find out if you have a business listing on Bing Local, simply search for your business in the Local Listings. If you cannot find a pre-existing listing, you can create one and enhance it through the Bing Business Portal.

As with Google, you will want to enhance your Bing listing with the most details possible as well as media to help boost the likelihood that it will rank higher than competitors.

Yahoo

To claim your Yahoo Local listing, you will to sign into your Yahoo account or create a Yahoo account if you don’t already have one. Then you will want to search for your listing on Yahoo Local. When you find it, you can click on the Enhance your listing link to add more details.

If you do not have a listing, you can create a basic or enhanced listing in the Local Listings Account Center. Enhanced listings are $ 9.95 per month and allow you to include up to 10 photos, promotion links, and a 3,000 character description of your business. These listings are more likely to attract clicks in search results!

3. Claim or setup your listing on top local search directories.

Want to build even more local references to your site? You can do so by submitting to additional local search directories. Here are some of the top ones and some basic statistics.

Domain authority is calculated by SEOmoz and indicates the likelihood that a website will rank well in search engines (the higher the number, the better the rankings). The number of incoming links shows the popularity of the domain, and the traffic data is from Compete showing US traffic estimates only.

  • Yelp is one of the most popular local directories, this site has a domain authority of 93 with over 4 million links from 92,000+ domains. Yelp received 15.6 million unique visitors in May 2011. They also offer great
  • Merchant Circle is another highly popular local directory with a domain authority of 83 and over 2.2 million links from 26,000+ domains. Merchant Circle received 6.6 million unique visitors in May 2011.
  • Yellow Pages, a well-known and trusted name in local since the phonebook days, has a domain authority of 92 and over 1.1 million links from 49,000+ domains. Yellow Pages received 25.3 million unique visitors in May 2011.
  • WhitePages, also a recognized name since the phonebook era, has a domain authority of 84 with over 2.9 million links from 13,000+ domains. WhitePages received 16.3 million unique visitors in May 2011.
  • Superpages, which also feeds into White Pages, 411.com and other local directories, has a domain authority of 87 and over 14 million links from 40,000+ domains. Superpages received 14.3 million unique visitors in May 2011.
  • Yellowbook (not to be confused with above mentioned Yellow Pages, has a domain authority of 81 with over 5 million links from 11,000+ domains. Yellowbook received 6.1 million unique visitors in May 2011.
  • Citysearch, which partners with sites like Expedia and Hotwire, has a domain authority of 84 and over 9.6 million links from 55,000+ domains. Citysearch received 10.7 million unique visitors in May 2011.
  • MapQuest was once known for just giving directions, but now also hosts local business profiles on their site with a domain authority of 96 and over 19.6 million links from 355,000+ domains. MapQuest received 40.7 million unique visitors in May 2011.
  • Insider Pages, recommendations for things that matter, has a domain authority of 73 with over 12.8 million links from 16,000+ domains. Insider Pages received 2.3 million unique visitors in May 2011.
  • Local.com which offers local business, coupon, and event searches has a domain authority of 70 with over 23.6 million links from over 8,000 domains. Local.com received 15.1 million unique visitors in May 2011.

A more comprehensive list can be found on this post by HubSpot. Another trick to determine which are the best local directories is to look at competitors on Google Places and see which local directories they are receiving reviews from customers.

The bonus of claiming your listing on these and other local search directories is that you will be able to constantly update your information if it changes and respond to any reviews about your business when needed.

Also, if you don’t have the time to submit yourself to local directories, you can use services like Universal Business Listing to submit your details to many local search directories automatically.

4. Target your Twitter campaign for a local audience.

Twitter, in some ways, is more powerful to a business than Facebook (although I would highly advise creating a Facebook page for your business as well). But I like Twitter because you don’t have to wait for people to follow you before you can interact with them. In most cases, you can start following and interacting with them first which will hopefully lead them to wanting to learn more about your business.

So how do you find people in your area who might be interested in your business? Here are some great places and ways to start.

Advanced Twitter Search

The beauty of the advanced Twitter search is that you can pinpoint people who tweet about any topic within a distance of 1 to 1,000 miles from a particular city or zip code. So if you are a dentist, and someone tweets “Is there a dentist that can perform __?” then you can chime right in!

Bing Twitter Maps

Want a more visual peek at who is tweeting about a particular topic in a region? Try out the Twitter Maps application with Bing.

Simply go to Bing Maps, and click on the Map Apps box in the bottom left sidebar. Scroll down and select Twitter Maps. Then you can use the search box to type in specific business names or keywords and see where tweets are happening using those terms.

The best part? You can use these directions to embed this map onto your website!

The Twitter Elite

Want to target the most influential Twitter users in a particular region? Twitter Grader has lists of the top 100 cities on Twitter. When you click on one, say Los Angeles, you will see the 50 most popular Twitter users in LA.

Wefollow Cities

Are you looking for more cities or more users per city than the Twitter Elite lists provide? Then head over to Wefollow and choose from top cities or type in your city in the search box. You can see Twitter users in those regions based on most influential or simply most number of followers.

Get Specific

Follower Wonk allows you to get specific with your local Twitter search. You can search Twitter bios for particular keywords (such as gardening if you sell garden supplies) and, using the more search options link, you can narrow down the results by location.

5. Find your customers on Facebook.

For the longest time on Facebook, there were only two ways to promote your Facebook page on Facebook – through advertising or through your own personal profile to your personal connections.

But now, things have changed. You can use Facebook as your fan page and comment on other pages. This is huge! Obviously, you would not want to comment on a direct competitor’s website. Instead, what you want to do is comment on pages that your target local customers would also be fans of.

For example, if you are a wedding photographer, you could become a fan of local brands that sell bridal gowns and bridal jewelry and start commenting on their pages. As brides-to-be visit their favorite local designer’s fan page, they might see you and want to check you out as a potential photographer for their upcoming nuptials.

Another example would be an automotive parts store. You could become a fan of local auto dealers and start commenting on their pages. That way, when someone buys their brand new Civic after chatting with their auto salesman on the fan page, they might already have your store in mind for some aftermarket enhancements.

As you can see, the possibilities are endless. So if you haven’t setup a Facebook fan page because you weren’t sure how to find friends, now is the time to let go of those fears and create your Facebook fan page.

And if you have a page that has been dormant, start using it to engage – you’ll be glad you did!

6. Get your business check-in ready on Foursquare.

If your business is a store, restaurant, salon, or other type of establishment that customers might be excited to tell their friends about, then make sure it is Foursquare ready by creating a free account, searching for your venue and claiming that venue.

From there, you can build loyalty to your establishment by offering specials for people who check-in. For example, you could say that new customers who check in to your spa get 15% off of spa treatment. You could even encourage people to tell their friends by offering a special discount if 10 or more people check during a specified time period.

What’s great about check-ins is that anyone following a user on Foursquare will be able to see that they are a customer of your business. Even better is when those same Foursquare users share their check-ins to their audience on Twitter or Facebook for additional exposure.

This tweet, for example, was sent to the users 500+ followers. When they click on the tweet, they get specifics about the location and even phone number of the business in question, and can even view more tweets about that location.

7. Be prepared to respond to your critics.

Although I already briefly mentioned this earlier in the local search directory setup, I thought I would further stress the importance of responding to your critics. It’s not pleasant to think about, but any online property from your local search listing to your Facebook fan page is open to public response – both good and bad.

Don’t be afraid of this. Look at it as the chance to defend your brand! If you think about it, a customer can leave your establishment and tell their friends they had a bad experience, and you may never know. But if they post their comments on your Facebook wall, you have the perfect platform to respond to them.

Everyone knows that businesses have good days and bad days. It’s the way you respond to your criticism that will count for your future fans, and may even help bring back that wayward customer that had an unfortunate experience.

Your Local Marketing Strategies

There you have it – some great local marketing strategies to get you going in local search and social optimization. Now it’s your turn – what other tips and strategies have you used for your local business with successful results? Share your tips in the comments!

[Image Credits: People Love Us on Yelp]


Source: Flowtown

The New Wave of Online Brand Management

by M. Dorn on July 14, 2011 · 0 comments

Okinawa
Guest post by Matt Polsky.

Prior to the rise of social networks, online brand management solely focused on common SEO techniques such as keywords, content, and proper HTML code. These techniques were used to secure and maintain the top positions on the search engines, and to ensure that only content a company wanted to remain visible regarding its product, services, or mission did so.

However, those days are over. A company can no longer rely only on SEO to provide proper online brand management if they wish to survive in the online world. Company’s now must integrate SEO techniques with the use of social media sites if they wish to protect and promote their brand.

Social media sites have become increasingly important for companies wishing to outperform their competition. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and LinkedIn have opened up completely new audiences to companies, which would have otherwise not been able to be reached. For many companies’ marketing teams these social networking sites have been a marketing dream.

After Ford’s monumental success of using social media to build hype for the 2011 Ford Fiesta, companies have been scrambling to adequately market themselves online. Now consumers cannot even watch a commercial or listen to a radio announcement without a Facebook or Twitter logo being given.

However, this increased visibility does come at a price. Companies have access to multiple platforms in which they can strengthen and expand their brands, but these sites can also be detrimental to a company if the accounts are not properly maintained. The 2010 Pew Internet & American Life study found that 58 percent of all consumers with access to the internet research a company’s product or service online before giving them their patronage, and most of those consumers are not going directly to a company’s primary website either. Third party sites, such as Facebook, Viewpoints.com, and Angie’s List have become popular stopping points for company reviews and information.

If a company’s Facebook page is covered in negative press, odds are, the potential customer will immediately move on and check out competitors. For businesses to get the most out of their social media accounts, they need to properly manage each account with frequent posts, updates, and positive press. Companies should also be actively engaging their customers. Not only negative comments need a response, comments and tweets complimenting the business are great openings to build strong brand advocates.

Companies wishing to succeed in the ever-growing online world need to increase their connectivity by incorporating both social media and the latest SEO techniques. Visibility can quickly determine a company’s success or failure, and without social media sites, businesses are giving up inexpensive resources that build brand awareness and hype. As social media sites continue to rise, online brand management will become increasingly more important, and companies should become proactive in managing their social media sites.

Image credit: slagheap (Flickr)

Matt Polsky is the Senior Content Manager for VA Mortgage Center, providing insights learned from the nation’s leading provider of VA home loans.

Source: The Social Media Marketing Blog

If your B2B company has been diligent in its product research, sales relationship and customer service development, it has developed a core group of fans. These fans love your products and services, and would gladly recommend them to their co-workers, clients and business contacts.

In the music business, street teams have long been an invaluable group of superfans that papers cities with upcoming concert flyers, spreads the word about new albums and recruits friends as new fans. Your B2B fans can act in a similar way in the online space, retweeting brand news, suggesting your B2B company for friends’ business needs on LinkedIn or tagging your company in a Facebook page status update.

Social media allows for B2B companies to locate, empower and task those fans on a direct level, without the go-between wall of media, email marketing or advertising. But before you can reward these fans and ask them to advocate on your B2B company’s behalf, you must first figure out who they are and where they interact with others online. Here are five ways to locate your B2B brand’s biggest supporters:

1. Use services designed to tune into online conversations

Find conversations about your brand using free services such as Kurrently, which tracks keywords on both Twitter and Facebook. If your B2B social media team has already set  up an RSS feed using Twitter’s search engine or specific search term columns in applications such as Hootsuite or Tweetdeck, keep an eye on users who post frequently about your brand. Build an internal list of users who frequently share information around your company, individual products or management, or interact often with your social media posts. Additionally, be sure to actively check in with these followers to build relationships beyond sales and promotions.

2. Review your blog comments
Advocates and fans of your B2B company are likely to be engaged on your company blog and are the ones leaving comments. This is true with any blog that receives even just a few comments. There are people who regularly post comments because they are engaged with your company. Since most commenting functions require an email address, it is easy to contact them and start the advocate conversation. If you are not encouraging blog comments by asking a question at the end of every blog post, here’s another reminder that you should be doing that.

3. Simply ask

You never  know if you don’t ask. If you’re already engaging on social media, send out feelers to your current followers. Schedule regular tweets that let followers know you’re looking to share insider information with people who want to be the first to know your B2B company’s news and get exclusive social media-only information, discounts and announcements.

4. Gather social media information from other marketing segments

If people are engaged enough with your brand to sign up for your email list, chances are they’ll also want to follow along on social media. Incorporate optional fields such as “Twitter handle” and “LinkedIn profile URL” into the sign-up process, and ask current registrants if they would like to be part of the action.

5. Take offline fans online

Be sure to leverage “real life” fans. Use face time at meetings, conferences and networking events to identify your B2B company’s fans, and carry those connections into the online world as well. Ask your B2B public relations, customer service and sales teams for positive media, customer and client encounters that could be continued and shared online.

Just like building an effective media list is key to pitching the right media contacts, identifying your B2B company’s online fans is important and takes time. Only after you have built a list of your company’s online fans, sorted them by their specific interests and engaged with them beyond the normal sales pitch can you begin crafting strategies and tactics to leverage those real – albeit online – relationships with you company’s fans.

How do you locate your B2B company’s biggest fans?

 

Related posts:

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  2. More Ways To Know If Your B2B Company is Social Media-Ready Last week I wrote a post about how to know…
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Source: Social Media B2B

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