Archive for the ‘microblog’ Category

What 10x growth gets you…

Friday, May 15th, 2009

In the last 12 months, Twitter has gone from geek obsession to media obsession. The user-base has diversified from the original gathering of web 2.0 geeks, bloggers, and technology early adopters to include Ashton Kutcher, Shaq, Britney Spears, Oprah, the nice lady four cubicles down from you with 30 cats, and probably your aunt and mother. So what happens to the fastest growing social network when it turns the corner from early adopter to mass adoption?

Backlash. (See this….and this….)

One of the earliest negatives people expressed regarding Twitter was the mundanity of many tweets. It was common to hear detractors argue that they didn’t see the value in hearing that someone is watching Lost, or getting ready to dive into a big fat juicy burger, or the very common “I’m hung-over” tweet. But when your favorite blogger is sharing links to fantastic articles, providing insight and thought leadership, and occasionally mentioning that he has the worst gas ever, it’s kinda fun and humanizing. Early adopters liked this unfiltered access to people they liked and respected. People who were building up their brands online liked the ability to keep in contact with people more regularly without having to write an entire blog post. The mundanity was fun, because it was mixed in with valuable information and amusing stream of consciousness.

But as the user-base diversifies the ratio of interesting/valuable information to mundanity/stream-of-consciousness gets out of balance. I am not the only one who feels this way. For those who haven’t see it, out College Humor’s take on Twitter in real life: http://www.collegehumor.com/video:1909386

I followed someone recently for a couple months before I realized, this person never says anything of value. In fact this morning I looked at his account and he tweeted 26 times in the last 12 hours and not once did he say anything remotely insightful, interesting, valuable, or engaging…just a crappy twitpic, a few @replies that were roughly 1 word or added no value, or ridiculously lame information about him and his family and their adventures of “driving to work”.

This is why there is a backlash brewing. It’s one thing to occasionally tweet about bad traffic or getting a flat tire or getting pulled over by the cops, when you balance that with links to interesting bloggers, new applications, the latest iPhone rumor, or…anything that might be of value to someone. Keep in mind, I’ve lobbied since day that for Twitter to survive and be successful it ultimately had to diversify and appeal to a broad audience. That means it has to be fun for people who aren’t creating content - just general consumers using it as a social network. That means the good with the bad. General consumers means a shift in the balance of the interesting/mundane.

So Twitter elitists - take a deep breath. This is just a growing pain and ultimately, it will elevate the early adopters as leaders. I’ve learned with media, eventually, quality wins. Broad adoption is not a threat to Twitter, it just might mean you have to be more careful about who you follow back. It means having personal AND professional accounts is likely to be important and apps like Tweetie and Nambu will be increasingly important.

Hold off on the backlash for now, and keep in mind that in order for Twitter to fulfill it’s destiny, it needs the kind of critical mass enjoyed by Facebook. There is a stark difference between using Twitter, and getting value out of Twitter and it’s up to early adopters to help new users find their way.

Now if only we could get Ashton Kutcher to switch to Myspace or something, that would be great. ;)

FOLLOW PEOPLE

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

Normally we reserve the blog for positive, thoughtful rhetoric about using Twitter for business. We’ve been excited watching Twitter’s explosive growth over the last year. Recent figures have 12 month growth at over 1000% - which is amazing by anyone’s standards. But with massive adoption comes users that may not be as accustomed to “interacting” with people directly - something that Twitter is designed for.

Recently Charlie Villanueva of the NBA received notoriety for tweeting during halftime of the Bucks vs. Celtics game. For Twitter geeks like us, that was a huge moment. Seriously - HE TWEETED AT HALFTIME. I immediately followed Mr. Villanueva and noticed something about his account: 5000+ followers, and he only follows 78 in return. So I did some more research:

Ashton Kutcher (@aplusk) 388,300 followers, he follows 56.
Jimmy Fallon (@jimmyfallon) 359,449 followers, follows 63.
John Mayer (@johncmayer) 253,987 followers, follows 20
Julia Allison (@juliaallison) 8,534 followers, follows 39.
Shaq (@the_real_shaq) 337,000 followers, he follows 470. (Which is actually pretty good, nice job Shaq.)

I mean, Julia Allison is really only web famous (no offense Ms. Allison, I think you’re awesome) and she can’t bring herself to follow more people.

This is the issue - Twitter is not going to work if it’s used as just another broadcast media. John Mayer is hilarious and down to earth (and geeky at times) so I enjoy reading his blog and following him on Twitter. But I like Twitter because I can have numerous ongoing conversations with people all over the world. Twitter works when I reply to someone’s tweet, then they follow me, and then a connection is formed. It’s not realistic to think someone can manage 300K followers and respond to everyone, but a 20 to 300K ration is not going to give anyone a breakthrough experience.

For Twitter to work for everyone long term, and not be relegated to some short term PR fad, it has to provide reciprocal benefit. Following John Mayer’s tweets, while occasionally enjoyable, does not offer me any benefit as a John Mayer fan. However, the occasion may come where I reply to John and he replies back and I will turn into a mush pile of gooey faced man crush. (*Note, I don’t have a man crush on John Mayer, just using it for the sake of example.)

If you want to get more out of Twitter - give more back. FOLLOW PEOPLE, and you will see the incredible viral capability of Twitter unleashed. You will earn fans for life. You will embolden relationships with people who buy your cds, watch your shows, go to your basketball games.

I hope to see some positive changes folks. We’re all in this together. As Twitter grows, we grow with it.

(*Note, I actually do have a man crush on John Mayer.)

Enterprise Microblogging - Missed Opportunity?

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

Jeremiah Owyang is very well respected as an analyst and has valid, thoughtful commentary on social networking for business. I’ve typically agreed with him enough not to be able to add a lot to his discussions (despite the fact that commenting on his blog might be good for business.) His recent post, List of Enterprise Microblogging Tools: Twitter for the Intranet caused me to think about the value of tools like Yammer versus using Twitter in a more transparent way, or even using Twitters privacy control to keep things closed off. I know some things need to be internal, but I worry that Jeremiah’s post won’t motivate Enterprise organizations to see the opportunity in opening their doors a bit.

Missed Opportunity for Enterprises

Shouldn’t any Enterprise want an opportunity to create searchable discussions about their brand? Isn’t this a great brand marketing and SEO opportunity for the Enterprise? According to Oracle, who just announced the launch of “OraTweet”, their internal microblog platform, that an internal microblog platform “allows us to broadcast messages safely in our own microcosm”. To be clear, ALL businesses have the need for non-public discussions that have nothing to do with marketing.

Missed Opportunity for Twitter

So why hasn’t Twitter added deeper functionality, possibly as a paid option to Enterprises? Maybe the best bet for these organizations is to use one system for internal discussions - and Twitter for discussions that should be accessible to the public. I think there are going to be a number of organizations, and Enterprises, that can use Twitter for internal discussions in a more transparent way and gain marketing/branding value from it. But is this something Twitter cares about? It certainly raises the question about how Twitter plans to monetize.

I’ve long held that Twitter, or even microblogging as a platform has the potential to replace forums, intranets, help desk systems and more. We’ll see if this new wave of Enterprise Microblogging leads organizations to see the broad capabilities of such a platform.

Twitter Links for Marketers

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

If you are trying to promote your blog, there are already numerous posts about how to use Twitter. But for marketers, Twitter might still be a difficult story to tell (or sell.) One of our first tasks at Cherp was to begin doing research specifically about Twitter to help build the case for our clients and future clients for why Twitter deserves it’s own attention in the marketing strategy. However there are a number of really helpful documents out there to help you define your strategy, sell Twitter/social networking internally or to clients, and probably how to better leverage it yourself.

1. Sapient - Survey…Top 10 Wish List for Agencies of the Future. Great document if you are working on strategy for your agency and you need to know how much energy to put into social networks. #7,8 and 9 are personal favorites of mine.

2. Emarketer - Sign up here to get their email newsletter. Every week there is data related to social network usage or social network advertising spending. It’s very helpful to monitor marketing trends and help with strategy definition.

3. Business Week - Various articles over the last few months have focused on Twitter, but I think the article about “How Companies use Twitter to Bolster Their Brands” is particularly good.

4. Inc Magazine - “Business Uses for Twitter” is a more general look at Twitter use for business, but in my experience when you are trying to make the case articles like this help.

5. New York Times - Brave New World of Digital Intimacy offers an important perspective on this topic and is a must read.

I also recommend Crunchbase for additional statistics about Twitter, although, the most important ones don’t seem to be disclosed anywhere (we’re working on that though, so stay tuned.)

Personification of Brand

Friday, September 5th, 2008
New Blog

Abbey Klaassen at Adage wrote an article titled “Microsoft’s New Spot From Crispin Is an Ad About Nothing (So Far)” and my first response to the new Microsoft spot was similar. I posted this to Twitter immdiately: @cherp “That was THE microsoft commercial? Really? Crispin Porter delivered that…”

I realized today that the new Microsoft spot is the same as what I’ve been recommending to companies about Twitter - in the age of social networking successful marketing is going to be about the personfication of brand. Twitter provides a way for individuals to connect with you, or your brand, in a more personal way. I connect with people daily, read their tweets, gain insight about them, and come to feel like I know them. Despite only being a 50×50 icon and 140 characters, my tweeps are real people to me - even the brands I follow. A machine can send email, you can outsource your call center, but Twitter (for now) requires a real person.

Microsofts new ad campaign, in my opinion is trying to accomplish the same thing. To counter Apple’s “I’m a Mac” ads, Microsoft needed to be human again. Bill Gates IS Microsoft, and as smart as Crispin Porter is they should get Bill Gates on Twitter immediately - joking about his retirement and how he now has time to do things like Twitter. Microsoft needs personification of brand because to many they are just this giant, rich, forceful brand that tried to take over the world (and forced us to use Internet Explorer.) The current Twitter user base is a perfect place for Microsoft and Crispin Porter to look next. With a heavy Mac contingency, and the potential to reach so many bloggers, I hope to see them join the ranks soon.

Watching Bill Gates speak, it’s hard to see him as this modern conqueror of the tech age. For Microsoft, being human means allowing people to develop a personal connection to the brand. Apple seems to have been able to do this from the beginning, for other brands it’s going to take the right advertising and the right action. Twitter is one example of how companies can create a more personal connection through action beyond advertising and it’s a critical component to a personification strategy if the brand wants to achieve long term benefit.

Consider this, while many companies are finally starting to adopt blogs as a way to reach consumers more regularly with their message - are blogs still so controlled and edited that they lose the personal touch that a blog is intended to imbue? I think this is why bloggers keep flocking to Twitter, and why it could be the lynchpin in strategies to personify one’s brand.

Twitter Recommends…

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

Part of the magic of Twitter is discovery. Being an open social network, I’m able to find people I would never otherwise be able to connect with and follow them. If I’m lucky, they follow me back - and in that brief moment Twitter makes me feel like a kid who just made a new friend. I’ve met all kinds of great people through Twitter, and the numbers keep adding up.

But here is the thing….

Why don’t you make recommendations?

Seriously, take the advice of Jonathan at WorkHabit and tag tweets, then based on tweet tags give “follow” recommendations. In fact, just liberally borrow from Last.fm because their whole “neighbor” idea is pretty awesome. Sure, I can search for people - but why not encourage connection by having Twitter play matchmaker.

Monetization option: Charge for this feature. Or add it to a sweet of cool features for $3 month. I would probably pay $9 every quarter for Twitter to make friend recommendations and a few other things like alerts (sorry www.tweetbeep.com) and stats.

Thanks for listening.

Matt

Creative ways to use Twitter, 2.

Monday, August 25th, 2008
New Blog

My last post “Creative ways to leverage Twitter” received some very positive emails and feedback.

Paul F. said: “I thought Twitter was a useless toy at first, but now I see it has potential to be a great tool.”

Someone identified as geek2.0 sent me a note that said: “Loved your post about Twitter. I have a feeling it’s going to be the big star out of web 2.0 sites, maybe more than Facebook.”

What are some other creative uses of Twitter?

I’ve been scouring Twitter looking for another example of an interesting way to use Twitter. For the most part, it’s more of the same. But it occurred to me that if a company were inclined, Twitter could be a great replacement for forums, and the networking nature could provide a benefit that forums don’t - new customers. What do I mean?

With a forum, users register to be able to read and post to the forum. Other users comment, and if the forum is run by or moderated by a company (an example is technical support forums for software) than frequently you get responses from company representatives. This is fine if you want the conversations to be fairly encapsulated within the forum. But what if you want to use the forum to grow your business? Having existing customers talk about your product with other existing customers can drive self-service behaviors, drive down support costs, but most importantly can spread positive word of mouth. How can Twitter be an equal or better option to existing forums?

Twitter provides a more public forum and allows people who are already using the site to network a new way to interact with your brand, using a social network they are already participating in. Now not only do other customers see their posts about your brand, but so does the rest of their network (and anyone searching on Google for that matter.) It leverages the network effects of Twitter not just to solve the problem or answer the question, but also to raise awareness of the brand.

Another considerable benefit of using Twitter as a forum is the transparency this gives to the company’s technology and support. Now users can hear how others are using the product, or solving the problem, or unique ways they’ve been able to leverage whatever widgets the company builds. Sure, this could be a problem if your customers hate your product or you have frequent trouble keeping things working - but frankly if this is the case then transparency isn’t your concern.

If you are a technology company and you offer (and meet) your SLA requirement in your terms of service, why not make that entire interaction public? Get the search engine visibility, PR or blog promotion, and network benefits of using a site like Twitter as your help desk. One of the biggest complaints of many software customers is the agony of having to submit a support issue through the automated attendant, or the online trouble ticket software that may or may not net you a response. With Twitter, your customers may end up solving each other’s problems - saving you time and resources.

What’s cool about Twitter is that it’s a blank canvas. It’s a new communication tool with a world of possibilities. Any other ideas for creative ways to use Twitter?

Creative ways to leverage Twitter.

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Social media is a phenomenon. No one will argue with it’s popularity, traffic, and continued monopoly over people’s time on the web. For marketers, this is wonderful as it offsets the loss of access to consumers due to declining television ratings and diminished popularity of radio. Google grew to monopolize advertising in web 1.0, and traditional marketers missed the boat. Now, all eyes are on social media and marketers are ready to react.

The question is, now that everyone is participating, networking, tweeting and friending…what are companies going to do to leverage these tools?

Twitter is a great example of a popular social media tool that is ripe for creativity. Twitter can be used to build a community, network directly with consumers, share PR news and updates, add personality to your company’s brand, provide status updates related to your company or service, and probably a litany of things that have yet to be discovered. For all it’s traffic and users, Twitter is missing 2 significant things that made companies like Google and Yahoo! successful - it has yet to provide a clear way for anyone to make money using it in the way that Google Adwords and Overture did before.

Let’s explore options on Twitter that could create value for businesses. There are the less creative things like sponsorship and advertising. Twitter could require company or branded accounts to pay, versus their current unlimited free model. I think one of the more creative ways to leverage Twitter would be to build communities.

This is The Community Model:

For the Community Model, let’s take a popular brand, website or blog with a growing but dedicated following. Rather than create it’s own branded social network, why not leverage Twitter to extend the blog and build a community of readers. This way, readers with like interests could begin to follow the blog’s Tweets and the connect with each other. The blog or website could use Twitter to give additional insight, live blog special events, provide a “behind the scenes” look at activities at the blog, and pre-release teasers to articles.

How does this create value for companies?

The Community Model would help distance blogging from social media, allowing companies to make it a mainstream form of publication. For established brands, this could be especially useful since their blog likely resides on a subdomain and is closely tied to the main website and brand. Leveraging Twitter in this way would allow them to frequently update without having to post directly to the blog, but still keeping up frequent connections with consumers.

Why would consumers do this?

Consumers are capable of brand loyalty, but more than anything this gives uninitiated consumers an entry into Twitter and a way to connect with like-minded people in a non-brand specific way. Forums on websites have proven successful, but by participating in forums you are tied to a particular website or brand. Twitter provides an ability to go beyond that company and continue growing your own personal network (this also benefits the companies involved as well, since it amplifies the network effects of each member. Thanks to Yoan Blanc or his excellent visual representation.)

This is just one example of way to leverage Twitter to build a community around a blog or website. Do you have any ideas of how Twitter can be used to create branding or marketing opportunities beyond just posting Tweets?

Twitter makes the news.

Monday, August 25th, 2008

It’s been gaining mainstream buzz this year, but Twitter has finally stepped into the bigtime recently with the Wired article about how Twitter broke the news about the Earthquake. To be clear, “Twitter” the company didn’t break the news, but Twitter users were all tweeting about the earthquake before any major news site had published anything.

Wired said, “Blogs and news sites buzzed the next day about how Twitter had ushered in a new era of communication.”

Most people want to talk about the Twitter business model, and sites like Mashable are all excited about Twitter breaking into the big time, but the article made mention of something in passing that really caught my eye. Towards the end of the article, Wired pointed out how companies like Dell, Jetblue and Whole Foods are using Twitter to communicate with customers. It’s this style of “opt-in” communication that people typically think about when they discuss email marketing. If you’ve ever tried to rent or buy, much less create a useful email list for marketing purposes, you’ve no doubt experienced frustration.

It brings me back to my earlier article about leveraging Twitter to build “communities” and get better feedback from customers - in real time. Products like live chat have created great tools for connecting with customers in real time - but times they are a changin - and now consumers like to wear their brand affinities right on their virtual sleeves (aka: social networks like Myspace and Facebook) and this gives brands a phenomenal opportunity to connect with consumers in a network environment.

So what’s this all mean for the entrepreneur or web business out there, debating about whether or not to use social media to connect with customers and whether it has true value. Debate no more. Social media has gone from being news to making it.

Twitter tools (the Collected Works)

Monday, August 25th, 2008

In case it wasn’t apparent from previous posts, Twitter is my favorite social network. Of all social media sites, Facebook and Linkedin included, I would much prefer Twitter and use it far more. Not only has Twitter been one of the more enjoyable of the web 2.0 technologies, it’s spawned some amazingly helpful tools to get more out of the technology.

Here is a collection of the most useful or interesting Twitter tools (that I’ve found.)

Summize - This is actually THE Twitter search engine.

Tweetburner.com - Metrics for your links on Twitter.

Tweetscan - Another Twitter search engine, but a very useful one.

Twellow - It’s a different kind of Twitter search, that’s more focused on finding and classifying people, than just giving you a list of tweets by content.
Twitterific - If you have an iPhone, and use Twitter, you probably already have this app. If you don’t have an iPhone this is a great reason to go get one.

Twhirl - I will caveat this by saying I don’t actually USE Twhirl. I did. I’ve downloaded it a couple of times. I can’t get into using it. It’s a cool app, though.

Twittervision - It’s cool, but totally useless. It’s not a Twitter client, it doesn’t aggregate, it will help you make many minutes of your life disappear. Of course, I visit it at least once a day.

Twitter Netvibes Widget - Netvibes is a type of widgetized feed reader and I like it quite a bit. Each feed is visually encapsulated in it’s widget, making them easy to keep apart and scan easily.

Twitpic - I just learned about this and I’m very excited. It allows you to post pictures to Twitter.

Tweetbeep.com - Like Google Alerts, but for Twitter. MUST USE THIS!

I’m sure there are many missing. Please tell me all the cool stuff I’ve missed in comments.