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Posts Tagged ‘Social Media’

On Transparency with “Friends with Benefits: A Social Media Marketing Handbook”

October 20th, 2009

I’m currently in a mad rush to finish reading an advance copy of a book due out in November 2009 by Darren Barefoot Julie Szabo. This book is a phenomenal read and is titled “Friends with Benefits: A Social Media Marketing Handbook”. Before I go on, I just want to put it out there that I was thrown by the title at first. In other words, I was confused about the authors meaning until I continued reading the rest of the title, “A Social Media Marketing Handbook” after which I grabbed my gut and had a big chuckle to myself as continued reading the press release. Just thought I’d share that little anecdote. :)

lonelygirl15

Without doing a direct quote from the book, there is a part that addresses honesty and authenticity on the internet through social media, be it via a blog, YouTube, Twitter, etc. The example used in the book was the lonelygirl15 marketing scheme that was, to my recollection, both lauded and looked down upon (Read this and this as examples). On the one hand it was incredibly cool that this so-called video blogger named “Bree” (16 years old) also known as lonelygirl15 on YouTube, was actually a 19-year old actress–which was astoundingly clever. But on the other hand, this reveal was bittersweet in that it immediately alienated the fans and betrayed the cool-factor of how transparent Bree was and the authenticity of what she talked about in her videos.

The good part of that “experiment” is that it served as a litmus test if you will, for just how people want use the internet and the immensely strong resolve for how people want to connect with others online. The closeness of getting to learn about a person who seemed to have no reason to lie about what she shared was betrayed. Fans were inadvertently made the butt of what effectively came across as a viral marketing trick. The feeling of connectedness with Bree and her honesty was amazing and it made you feel like you (the viewer and fan) were friends with a real person. While the medium (the internet) is virtual the desire to connect with real people real, and the eventual relationships that people do build via the many tools on the internet, (Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Viddler, Blogger, etc) are also real–NEVER forget this! (As an aside, other iterations of this marketing scheme were used, but in a way that wasn’t alienating by virtue of the kind of content that was being marketed–in this case a film along the lines of the shaky Blair Witch camera film style. For example, the video clips that were posted to the internet and passed off as if they were real to market the film “Cloverfield”, by my standards, was a sheer genius means of getting the film known and built a strong following before it’s release. Learn more… with J.J.’s Viral ‘Clovefield’ Diary)

A real, genuine, and positive testament to what kind of community could have continued around lonelygirl15 before news broke of it’s falsehood, were she blond, 25 and an even more active video blogger, is the very real, Justine Ezarik of ijustine.com. She has a huge following–primarily young females–and most of what she does is in real time, in that she shoots a lot of video and posts it to the web relatively close to the time she shot it. She essentially streams a portion of her life on the internet, interacts with her fans, or friends as she puts it, via different social networking sites, and even features them in her own mini web show, “Ask iJ“. The majority of the tools that she uses are free social networks that she uses to share and connect. More importantly, I haven confirmed whether she did this on purpose or it just happened this way, but all the internet tools that she uses and what she does with them now serve as her calling card or business card as far as her personal Brand “iJustine” is concerned. Finally, all of this is done in a positive way that is honest, authentic and non-alienating to her fans and business partners, while never compromising her own privacy and safety.

Authenticity goes a long, long way and that is what continues to amaze me so much about this present phase in our age of the internet.

In closing, I’ll give a more thorough review once I’ve gotten through this book.

‘Til then, stay synced!

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SQ3: No texting at the movies?

April 27th, 2009

Paidcontent.org: What are a million follower, subscribers, friends worth?

April 19th, 2009

Upon learning of Ashton Kutcher’s competition with CNN to reach a million followers on Twitter, the one nagging question that has been hanging in my mind ever since I joined any social network has been summed up in Tameka Kee’s article at paidcontent.org: What are a million social-media followers worth? (paraphrasing)

I tried to leave a reply in the comments section, but for some reason it wasn’t working for me. So I’ve decided to share my answer here.

Twitter can indirectly lead to some revenue for any given company or freelancer that obtains great twitter followers as clients. But as was pointed out, Twitter itself doesn’t garner any user revenue outright, and I think that’s okay. I still think Twitter is a valuable tool for learning about what people are saying about your brand/company/product or what have you. I find that the real time feedback that Twitter allows to any user is extremely valuable information. It’s not a purely effective survey tool because the bias lies in the fact that a person mostly likely has followers because they like what’s being offered.

So yeah, that’s my 2 cents on the matter.

Do you agree?

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Social Question: Facebook Purgatory

April 11th, 2009

Read the question and comment with your response! ^_^

This is a question that I adapted from a quiz that caught my attention on gizmodo.com. I found it quite hilarious, but the way the original question is phrased is far to accusatory, so I changed it to the following.

Here is this week’s social question:

Have you ever contemplated leaving people in Facebook purgatory whom you do not want to accept, but are too afraid to deny?

Here is my response to the question…

Leave a comment here or hit me up on Twitter via an @ message to (Ex. @macdavid) and add this tag in your tweet so that I can track it later: #macsocialquestion. (No direct messages please, otherwise I can’t track it. Sorry.)

Twitter.com Responses


@morewillie: “Nah I have no problem denying people haha but I also lack a heart.”

@hcurrior: “RE: Facebook purgatory — I agree. Have contemplated, not done. #macsocialquestion”

@natyca: “i learned: keep your friends close but your enemies closer from the count of montecristo :)

Viddler.com Responses


drewmgriffin: “Just as long as you continue to follow me David and remain my friend on FB!…”

Patricius: “To answer the question. Yes, I have left people in FBP. Several times… usually people I don’t know. But recently I’ve just turned my FB into a whore account and just add everyone, and just don’t put anything private on it. I mean, private stuff shouldn’t be on the net anyway, IMO.”

bbautista: “I’ve got a few that I haven’t approved, but mostly because I have no idea who they are and they look a little sketchy. If I know someone, I usually approve them because I never put anything on Facebook that I wouldn’t want my worst enemy to see. Same goes for Twitter… anyone can see it, so I keep things pretty generic.”

edwinv: “I’ve only dropped one person since joining FB. The reason being is he continually kept spamming the timeline. If you’re going to do that, create a fan page instead. Since then, I’ve been a little more critical as to who I add on there. If I don’t know the person I more than likely will not approve them.”

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Social Question: Twitter (Implicit) Social Contract

March 21st, 2009

Read the question, Leave a comment! :)

I recently asked via a tweet on Twitter.com the following:

This is my implicit social contract: If you follow me, I try to greet you. If you say nothing I probably unfollow you. What would you do?

This is the social question for this week. Leave a comment here or hit me up on Twitter via an @ message to (Ex. @macdavid) and add this tag in your tweet so that I can track it later: #macsocialsquestion

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