Posts Tagged ‘Twitter

13
Aug
09

Britney makes money off Facebook!

Whilst we’re all scrabbling round trying to make money off social media marketing, Britney‘s powerhouse brand (one of the most popular on Twitter and Facebook) is effortlessly creaming in profits off her facebook site by offering ‘digital’ merchandise vouchers to her fans: http://tinyurl.com/qr8nw9

Buy Me!!!

Buy Me!!!

Britney fans (there’s 2 million on Facebook and nearly 3 million on Twitter) can buy gifts for mere $2 dollars and share them with their ‘friends’ and ‘followers’ – awesome! Totally.

Celebrity searches of this stature are always going to fare strongly with online communities, but I do admire the ingenuity of brand Britney in offering her fans something seemingly original, yet utterly worthless, for cash, (insert your own gag here) – cash which she doesn’t have to share with Facebook!

So while big brands and retailers like Nike and Gap are trialing new online mechanics that pertain to be purely brand building, informative, trend watching. Team Britney are making hard dollar and spreading her fan base right under your little nose.

FYI: I got $80 last night on ebay for my Britney ‘man-bag’ – complete with stickers, badges and tattoos. To Austria. It’s global.

11
Aug
09

is this the end of blogging? Google’s new search engine technology

Google’s newly branded “Caffeine” search technology is causing major headaches for businesses in how their company ranks in search results. In our earliest tests, it favours some social media (Flickr) but not others (FOR NOW). Until it’s formal launch, Google are being very tight lipped on how it affects your online PR and SEO, positive or negative, but we’re keen to seek out advice from blogs and comments.

This could change the way we blog ourselves shamelessly in self promotion!

Interestingly, today’s Brand Republic’s posts were temporarily unavailable (proving it’s already a hot topic to SEO specialists) but are now back online at: http://tinyurl.com/kugz72

Latest info is still available however through PC World (of all places): http://tinyurl.com/nfujjj

Caffeine is going to cause another hangover for marketers and SEO experts with a whole  new range of search algorithms and jargon to get your head round.

And as Google has said it has been working on Caffeine for many months, it claims it’s not simply a market reaction to the launch of Microsoft’s Bing. They are merely once again stamping their authority on the fast moving pace of social media impacts.

Google has invited web users to test Caffeine and give feedback before a full public debut. So watch this space…

 

28
Jul
09

5 Amazing ideas on how to use Twitter as business

Twitter continues to come a long way from just following Team Katie or Team Peter (but is it still fun?)

Found this on ezinearticles.com which is useful: FIVE Twitter business ideas to make social media work. The full article is on http://tinyurl.com/lvrpbz  

- but here are the highlights. It’s steeped in jargon, drop me a line if you want to cut through the chaffe and speak plain English. 

Local List Builder 

Local marketing is the new rage. It’s a little known fact Twitter is a really potent local marketing tool. You can search for a particular locale using the Twitter search engine, and follow tons of people who are in your area. Develop a relationship, get easy consultation gigs–that’s a lucrative Twitter business strategy right there.

Authority SEO 

If your Twitter account is a mavenship maker where you can become an authority in your niche, how much more will that effect be quadrupled when you pair it up with SEO success. Even thought your tweets may not have link juice, but because of its high PageRank–you’re able to rank in the front page of Google with a few measly backlinks.

JV Attractor 
Any marketer worth their salt is looking to network with other marketers. That’s why marketing experts are saying conferences are the best ways to form strategic alliances that will lead to cash in the pocket. Twitter makes that easy by cutting away the distance and time issues and makes connections easy. Twitter is the Country Club of the Internet.

Sales Scoop Exploder 
One key factor in a Twitter marketing campaign’s success is relevancy. The more in tune you are with your prospect’s needs, the more sales you will make. Plain and simple. The best way is to again go to Twitter trending topics, see what people are talking about and tailor your marketing messages around them. You’ll see response rates go up.

 

27
Jul
09

New Twitter homepage to train brands and users

There’s endless Top Tips and How To’s on best practice for making Twitter sell your brand. This week, we may not need them, as from the following article, Twitter are doing it for themselves now. What’s next? An advertising rate card and technical specification sheet for advertising enquiries?

News from Warc: http://www.warc.com/News

Twitter, the microblogging website, will launch a new homepage this week, as part of a broader effort by the social media service to “better show who we are” to both companies and consumers.

VMS, the news monitoring service, estimated that Twitter received $48 million (€33.8m; £29.2m) of free media coverage for the 30 days to 20 July this year, and the social networking portal is seeking to capitalise on this sort of publicity.

In order to achieve this, “we need to do a better job of explaining ourselves to people who hear about us and then have no idea what do to,” Biz Stone, one of the platform’s co-founders, said.

“We have to turn a lot of awareness into engagement. Our front page is not reflective of that right now,” he added. 

The new features on its redesigned homepage are set to include a search box, data on current “trending topics”, and more details about how to use the social messaging utility.

Stone also said that visitors will now be able to “try it out without having to sign up, so you can get an idea of what Twitter is before you use it.” 

Alongside giving the site a more interactive tone, the new welcome page is intended “to show us as a place where people can discover what is going on in real-time and much more,” he added.

The company has also developed a section of its website, called Twitter 101, which explains to brand owners how best to utilise its product, and offering case studies from several advertisers. 

“Businesses of all kinds, including major brands, increasingly find that listening and engaging on the service lead to happier customers, passionate advocates, key product improvements and, in many cases, more sales,” the Twitter 101 page states.

It quotes the example of Dell, which has 80 branded accounts on Twitter, and has used the site to “let people know about deals,” as well as “interact with customers” and “raise awareness about the brand”. 

Earlier this year, the computer manufacturer reported that it had posted $3 million in sales using Twitter, while KFC and Whole Foods have also successfully “tweeted” to connect with consumers.

Similarly, Pepsi established an official presence on the social network in January this year, and regards it as the “only medium where we can have a two-way continuous dialog about the brand,” Bonin Bough, director of social and emerging media for PepsiCo, said.

Its initiatives on the portal include tracking consumer feedback related to the launch of Pepsi Throwback, and even offering a tribute to Michael Jackson, who featured in ads for the company in the 1980s. 

“We’re trying to humanise the brand, to make it more accessible to consumers. On Twitter, they can complain or praise, and we can use it as a way to gauge how people are feeling,” said Ana Maria Irazabal, brand director for Pepsi. 

Among the major differences in the ways customers use the social media service compared with the soft drinks giant’s toll-free phoneline is that they tend to offer opinions of its brands, rather than focusing on specific issues. 

“They feel they’re invited to give their opinions on the how the brand should move forward, and they’re very detailed,” Irazabal argued. “When we respond quickly, people give us kudos.” 

Moreover, Pepsi is increasingly requiring staff members to register for personal account on social media sites, as it is “very hard to talk to agencies if you have never used the tools,” she said.

Data sourced from Boomtown/AdAge/Twitter; additional content by WARC staff, 27 July 2009

23
Jul
09

How to protect your office from swine flu: READ IT HERE…

This is taken ‘word for word’ from Yorkshire’s largest employer, Leeds City Council. Issued to all 35,000 staff last week, it seems they’re dropping like flies, with one small office of only 35 moving from a partner at home having it last week, to current staff toll SENT HOME, under doctor’s orders, at FIVE and counting….

I’ve pasted here the Council’s advice in its entirety. Maybe, if you heed it, you won’t suffer the same.

Leeds City Council

Occupational Health Service

Pandemic Influenza – Information for Staff

If you think you have swine Flu

If you think you have swine flu, the advice is to stay at home and contact your GP’s surgery. Your GP will tell you what to do next.

Based on symptoms, the GP may also advise general treatment such as bed rest, using paracetamol to reduce temperature, plenty of oral fluids etc.

What are the risks of swine flu?

Most of the cases reported in the UK have been mild.  Where people have become seriously ill, they have generally had underlying health problems.

Pandemic Influenza – High risk groups

Doctors should give priority to early treatment with antiviral medicine to people in higher risk groups.

If you have:

  • Chronic lung disease
  • Chronic heart disease
  • Chronic kidney disease
  • Chronic liver disease
  • Chronic neurological disease
  • Immunosuppression (whether through disease or treatment)
  • Diabetes mellitus

Or are:

  • on drug treatment for asthma within the past three years
  • Pregnant
  • aged sixty five years or over

you should contact your GP by telephone as soon as you have symptoms.

Signs and symptoms of flu:

The main symptoms are the sudden onset of:

Fever

Cough or shortness of breath

Other symptoms may include:

  • Headache
  • Tiredness
  • Chills
  • Aching muscles
  • Sore throat
  • Runny nose
  • Sneezing
  • Loss of appetite

The incubation period is from one to four days, though most commonly two to three days.

People are most infectious soon after they develop symptoms.  They can continue to spread the virus, for example in coughs and sneezes for up to five days (seven in children).  People become less infectious as their symptoms subside and once the symptoms are gone, they are no longer infectious.

How is it caught and spread?

Like winter flu, swine flu spreads from person to person by close contact.  Some examples of how the virus is spread include:

  • From a person who is infected coughing and / or sneezing  within a short distance
  • By touching or shaking the hand of an infected person and then touching your mouth, nose or eyes without washing your hands
  • Touching surfaces (e.g. door handles) that have become contaminated with the flu virus and then touching your mouth, eyes or nose without first washing your hands

What should you do if you have symptoms or are ill?

If you feel ill with symptoms  of a  flu like illness while at work, it is important that you don’t simply carry on working.

You should report your symptoms  immediately to you manager or team leader and, if they are consistent with flu,  you should be sent home.

You should contact your GP and not to return to work until the symptoms have cleared and you feel well enough to return.

If you develop symptoms whilst you are not at work you should:

  • Stay at home
  • Not go to work until fully recovered
  • Contact your GP surgery and tell your doctor what symptoms you have.
  • Inform your manager to let them know

Once your symptoms have gone,  you should wait for forty eight hours before returning to work.

A return to work would also depend on how ill you have been and how soon you feel better after your symptoms have gone.

As long as you have been free of symptoms for forty eight hours, there is no barrier to your returning to work at Leeds City Council.

What should you do to protect yourself and others from flu?

It is important to make sure that you: 

  •  Use a tissue to cover your nose and mouth when coughing and / or sneezing, dispose of the tissue promptly and then wash your hands thoroughly
  • Tissues should be disposed of in the domestic waste – they do not require any special treatment
  • You  should not use cloth handkerchiefs or reuse tissues.  This carries the risk of contaminating pockets or handbags which may then recontaminate hands each time they go into their pockets or handbags and spread the infection.
  • You  should clean your hands frequently, especially after coughing, sneezing and using tissues. Soap and water is perfectly effective.  However hand rubs (microbicidal hand rubs, particularly alcohol – based) can be used as an alternative.
  • You should avoid touching your mouth, eyes or nose unless you have recently cleaned your hands
  • Normal household detergent and water should be used to clean surfaces frequently touched by hands
  • You should clean your hands as soon as you get to work and when you arrive home.



WeAreDeviate


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.