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Social Media Round-up of the Week – 25 February

Friday, February 25th, 2011

Welcome back to our weekly instalment of what’s hot in the world of social media. In case you missed what happened over the past week, here’s our top five and don’t forget – if you see anything that really impresses you, why not let us know by emailing on social@umpf.co.uk Perhaps yoWeb sneakersur suggestion will make the cut next week:

1. Tripadvisor launches a version of augmented reality for the iPad

2. An Egyptian family names their daughter Facebook

3. Nike sneakers get a web-friendly makeover

4. Bad habit? Too much Facebook gets Nun banished from her order

5. Is Quora already being valued at $1Billion? Is this dotcom bubble 2.0?

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How to Make (or Lose) Friends and Influence People

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011

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Social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter have changed and challenged our traditional perceptions of friendship.  In our increasingly digital world, friendship no longer means meeting up face-to-face for a coffee once a week, but rather clicking ‘confirm’ on the friend request button on Facebook, or following someone interesting on Twitter.

So, it was no surprise to hear last week that latest research suggested that the more friends you had on Facebook, the more you were prone to greater levels of stress and ‘neurotic limbo’. Apparently, constantly providing interesting status updates, photos and posts on discussions pages can prove too much for some and panic ensues when there’s not enough going on in your life to provide witty, interesting and thought-provoking updates every hour of the day.

This research, whilst yet to be backed up by wider scientific study, does serve as a cautionary tale. At Umpf, we’ve always been clear that entering this brave new world of social media requires commitment on a long-term basis from brands and not just a ‘hop on, hop off’ approach. Recent stories about brands shutting down their Facebook and Twitter accounts, and the resultant negative press, only serves to back this up.

Social media represents a fantastic opportunity for many brands to engage with potential and existing consumers, but it’s about interaction and not just pushing out marketing messages on an ad-hoc basis. The phrase ‘making friends and influencing people’ no longer follows in the social media world. We can have friends without influencing them and we can influence people without first being friends. Influence counts for everything and only a long-term commitment to social media will engender this amongst consumers.

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Social Media Round-up of the Week – 11 February

Friday, February 11th, 2011

Linkedin 2

Welcome back to our weekly instalment of what’s hot in the world of social media. In case you missed what happened over the past week, here’s our top five and don’t forget – if you see anything that really impresses you, why not let us know by emailing on social@umpf.co.uk Perhaps your suggestion will make the cut next week:

1. Superbowl is the most checked into venue on Foursquare with a record 200,000 check-ins.

2. Great infographic, right, showing a breakdown of Linkedin users

3. New ‘Life Caching’ trend catches on with this latest platform from MyHistro. Life caching is collecting, storing and displaying your whole life; think of it like Foursquare on steroids.

4. Storify takes citizen journalism to the next level, with social media updates creating online stories. Could this be a foretaste of how journalism is changing because of social media?

5. The demographic of Facebook and Twitter users compared.

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Is Social Media Becoming a Numbers Game?

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

As a social media agency it won’t come as any surprise that we monitor and manage multiple channels (Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Flickr, etc) on behalf of our clients.  Each channel has its own list of followers, fans and friends and often we concentrate on specific channels according to the client’s wishes and our recommendations.864731_lucky_numbers_3

Twitter is often a popular choice for brands, but as more and more enter the Twitter-sphere we’re noticing how differently companies worldwide are reacting, responding and engaging in conversations in a comparison to the next – some doing it better than others.

Naturally, each of the brands will be trying to satisfy their own objectives for utilising a social media channel such as Twitter – objectives that are often associated with follower numbers or mentions.  However, are these objectives a good measurement of the extent of engagement their brand is achieving within a genuine target audience?  Or are they in fact just a host of numbers to show that a job is being done?

Many brands may measure their success on Twitter by the number of followers they have, something that can actually be counter-productive.  It’s easy to become obsessed with having follower numbers into the thousands or tens of thousands, but blindly following irrelevant people in the hope that some may follow you back is actually a method of spamming (we don’t like spamming- see previous blogs) and besides, it doesn’t really get anyone anywhere.  The key to Twitter from a brand’s perspective is to engage and interact with followers who are relevant to a business, enabling the brand to have conversations online and create a public community.

We also see people attributing the number of tweets they’ve posted as a sign of a successful Twitter account. This might actually signal that the brand is not really listening or engaging with their followers but is posting impersonal, untimely tweets- often about themselves or something their brand is doing.  It’s not a great way of achieving engagement and interaction that we’re looking for when communicating through social media.

On the contrary, numbers can often be useful where retweets or @ mentions are concerned.  Someone retweeting your post normally signals that you’ve said something interesting.  Similarly, if an @ mention is responding to something you’ve tweeted then you have successfully managed to engage with a follower and should continue to try and keep the conversation between them interesting and ongoing.

We’re well aware that the quality versus quantity argument is alive and well in the social media arena and despite there being ongoing criticism in the traditional PR remit (we won’t start on payment by results) there doesn’t seem to be any lessons learnt so far, and unfortunately we sense a similar fate for social media channels.  We’re not holding our breath for Twitter to be approached in a ‘best practice’ kind of way anytime soon, but we hope that brands will begin to realise that following any old ‘Tom, Dick or Harry’ is not strategic and is in fact just a numbers game.

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To paywall or not to paywall?

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

Last week a sudden flurry of excitement on Twitter spelt one thing – the Times paywall had gone down. Journalists tweeted, the world scoffed and we all had a peep behind the iron online curtain. Whilst we wouldn’t want to comment on what we saw, it did reveal the aura that surrounds the now ‘less than free’ Times website. Even if visitors to the site have plummeted since Murdoch tried to make us put our hands in our pockets, The Times still has enough clout to get us talking.

When the TimMurdoches decided to go behind the paywall many predicted it was the end of the beginning; how long, we asked, could other papers afford not to charge us for viewing their sites? Well, with recent news that The Telegraph is considering the paywall and others could follow suit, we asked Quora, which papers would be first to ‘cover up’ in 2011.

It was no surprise to hear that other users of Quora thought The Sun could follow suit this year. After all, as it’s part of News International, The Times trial could easily be implemented across other newspapers in the group.

The attention of the UK’s biggest newspapers might be on the paywall debate, but newspapers fail to recognise the challenge of micro-blogging at their peril.  Social media platforms, including Twitter, have helped move journalismBlog on so much in the past five years that arguments about whether or not to have a paywall could well be obsolete within a few years.

Social media has already eroded the supremacy of the traditional press, but it’s still hard to say whether bloggers or citizen journalism will overtake professional journalism as the de facto source of stories in years to come. For now, though, let’s just sit back, relax and enjoy the mud-slinging as the papers fight it out to gain the moral high-ground on the issue of paying for online news.

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