Posts Tagged ‘social media’

Social Media Digest: McFail, Snickers Own Goal & More

Friday, January 27th, 2012

Welcome to the latest edition of the Social Media Digest. In case you’ve missed it, here’s what’s making news in the social realm this week:

1. McFail – McDonald’s suffered a Twitter blunder this week in a drive for positive user-generated word of mouth using a hashtag #McDstories, whichwas soon hijacked with the horror stories of disillusioned customers. One tweep commented “My brother finding a fake finger nail in his fries. #McDStories.” Some used the hashtag to simply mock the ‘Golden Arches:’ “#McDStories More than half a year since last McTerrible McFattening McMeal. I don’t McMiss the McFood McOne McBit.” In a bid to salvage the foiled initiative, McDonald’s promoted a more generic hashtag #LittleThings, however the twittersphere has so far used the tag for anything but Mcpraise.

New Picture (36)2. Own Goal – Snicker’s launched their Twitter account a mere two weeks ago and have already found themselves mired in controversy.  It all began after footballer Rio Ferdinand tweeted “You’renot you when you’re hungry @snickersUk#hungry#spon” with a picture of himself posing with a Snicker’s chocolate bar. The tweets have provoked criticism from all directions, including one user who replied with “Do you really need the money that badly?” and another added: “I’m not on here to be advertised at”. Ian Botham, Amir Khan, Cher Lloyd and Katie Price have alsotweeted similar sentiments and promotional pictures. An Office of Fair Trading spokesman said: “Online advertising and mnot you when you’re hungry @snickersUk#hungry#spon” with a picture of himself posing with a Snicker’s chocolate bar. The tweets have provoked criticism from all directions, including one user who replied with “Do you really need the money that badly?” and another added: “I’m not on here to be advertised at”. Ian Botham, AmirKhan, Cher Lloyd and Katie Price have alsotweeted similar sentiments and promotional pictures. An Office of Fair Trading spokesman said: “Online advertising and marketing practices that do not disclose they include paid for promotions are deceptive under trading laws.”

3. Search No Evil – Facebook, Twitter & MySpace have formed analliance against Google byengineering a software add-on for browsers which counteracts the effect of Google’s alteration of its search results to favour its own Google+ social network with a piece of code named after the giant’s first unofficial strapline “Don’t be evil,” resonating Google’s philosophy that ‘you can make money without being evil.’ Twitter claims Google+ artificially inflates its natural position by pushing its own results, rather than the best ones. However Google’s chairman Eric Schmidt insisted that Facebook and Twitter did not allow sufficient access to their sites for Google to be able to integrate results from them intoits search and that Google+ was not being unfairly favoured. The “Don’t be evil” code can found at “Focus on the user.”

New Picture (38)4. Social Capitalism – A study by Delloite has found that Facebook adds an estimated €15.3 billion value to the European economy, as well as supporting 35,200 UK jobs and contributing £2.2bn to the British onomy each year. At the DLD conference in Munich on Tuesday, Facebook COO Cheryl Sandburg noted the emergence of a £467m per annum ‘app economy,’ as many companies have centred their business models on building applications and games to capitalize on the millions of UK Facebookers. Delloite also estimates that the development of Facebook apps generates 7,500 jobs in the UK. Deloitte’s report also claims that lovers of the social monolith contribute £550 million to technology sales, which supports 8,800 jobs. Considering the adverse economic growth in the UK last quarter, this will undoubtedly increase the influence of the Facebook lobby.

5. Megaupset – One of the world’s leading sharing sites Megaupload has been shutdown this week due to a verdict of the US Grand Jury, which found the site owner Kim Dotcom guilty of copyright piracy equating to $500 million of lost revenue. The flamboyant Kim Dotcom has been charged with global criminal conspiracy to pirate illegal and lost a bid for bail yesterday, with the judge ruling he was a significant flight risk. He is appealing that decision ahead of attempts by American authorities to extradite him. Just days of the SOPA blackout controversy, Dotcom’s sentence illustrates the fine line between ‘sharing’ and internet piracy.

6. LA Fiasco – The gym group LA Fitness faced the wrath of the Twitterati yesterday when a couple from Essex complained about being locked into a 2-year contract despite falling pregnant and her husband being made redundant. Originally reported in The Guardian, the scandalous behaviour of the gym prompted a storm of criticism and began trending on Twitter with angry tweets directed at LA Fitness’s account on Wednesday. The group was forced to delete its own earlier tweet claiming  “We do not comment on individual cases,” and then began commenting quite a lot on this particular case, including an announcement that it would be waiving all outstanding fees charged to the couple – a testament to the transition of power that social media has brought about.

7. Twit or Miss? - Twitter announced that it will censor tweets in individual countries in a blog post yesterday. The new filtering technology coincides with the micro-blogging site’s ambitious agenda of expanding its user-base from 100 million to 1 billion. Reaching that goal will require expanding into more countries, which will mean Twitter will be more likely to have to comply to laws contrary to free-expression. Twitter will post a ‘censorship notice‘ whenever a tweet is removed, similar to what Google has been doing for years. If Twitter defies a law in a country where it has employees, those people could be arrested, this is why Twitter is unlikely to try to enter China, where its service is currently block. Although it’s worth thinking about whether the Arab Spring could have been as successful if regional censorship had been implemented prior to the protests movements.

Social Media Digest: Foursquare Search, YouTube Growth and FB Apps

Friday, January 20th, 2012

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 5:

New Picture (65)1. Foursquare is rolling out its own search engine, called Explore, as the location-based social network looks to expand its audience. The firm descibed Explore as a product to add “an ‘interesting’ layer to the whole world, tailored just for you. In a statement, the firm explained how the search engine would be tailored to each user:

“Most real-world searches are one-size fits all. You search for pizza, and it gives you the same list of pizza places, whether you like deep dish or thin crust, whether you want a slice or a sit-down meal, or whether your friends would love it or hate it. But not with foursquare Explore, because you are your friends’ (along with 1,500,000,000 more from the foursquare community) help us personalize our recommendations for you. Ever you time you check in, we get better at finding places you’ll like.”

New Picture (66)2. A study by Hitwise in December has shown that the UK accounted for 606 million Internet visits to YouTube. The study shows that video sharing sites, citing YouTube and BBC iPlayer as examples, received 936 million visits last month. This figure has been steadily increasing, and in October, we saw a 36% increase in visits to online video sites. But YouTube is clearly ahead of the pack. The site  is one of the fastest growing according to Hitwise’s data, and accounted for 65% of visits to video sharing sites in the UK in December 2011.

3. Facebook, following a year of whirlwind growth, overtook Orkut as Brazil’s most-popular social network in December. Orkut is a social network that Google launched in 2004. Its popularity in Brazil, where 60% of Orkut’s users are based, led to it being hosted and managed by Google Brazil from 2008 onwards. Facebook’s user base increased 192% during 2011, according to a comScore report released Tuesday. In December 2010, 12.4 million Brazilians visited Facebook.com. One year later, that number skyrocketed to 36 million Brazilians.

New Picture (67)4. A lot of the web went ‘black’ yesterday in response to the US governments prospective anti-piracy laws. Sites like Wikipedia downed tools and stopped visitors from viewing pages in an attempt to raise awareness of what they believe will be dangerous legislation for freedom of speech and freedom of internet use. Google and Craiglist also draped their pages with protests about the legislation. The New York Times has an interesting round-up of the day’s events.

New Picture (68)5. Facebook is adding a series of new applications to let users share such things as photos, travel or fashion. The online social network firm unveiled more than 60 new apps that users can share on their Facebook profiles, known as their Timeline. Users can already share the music they are listening to or news articles they are reading. But this latest development expands the number of apps significantly.

More Awards For Leading Social Media Agency

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

As another social media gong lands in the Umpf trophy cabinet, we believe it cements our position as one of the top social media agencies in the UK.

Top UK Social Media Agencies. UKBut it’s not just ourselves and our clients who think so – Econsultancy listed its Top Ten Social Media Agencies in March, with Umpf making the grade.

In fact, Umpf was the only agency outside the South East listed in Econsultancy’s Top Ten Social Media Agency table.

We’re based in Leeds and we don’t believe there’s a finer social media agency in Yorkshire or the North.

Social Media Agency of the Year. UmpfA fact highlighted by today’s news that Umpf has been voted the Best Social Media Agency in Yorkshire by The Drum magazine.

Its annual New Year’s Honours list ranks agencies which have ‘consistently produced top notch creative work and whose trophy cabinets are fit to burst’.

In the last 12 months we’ve won a raft of social media agency awards and PR gongs, too.

So if you want to give your social media some Umpf, drop us an email or give us a buzz on 0800 4 10 20 10.

If you’re looking for a wider, global list, try this directory of social media agencies.

Social Media Digest: Christmas Special

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

To fit in with the abundance and generosity of the festive season, we have a special bumper ‘Christmas Edition’ of our social media digest for you today. So, pull up a pew, pour yourself your favourite tipple (not too much, now) and enjoy reading through what’s hot in the world of social media:

1. Facebook has begun rolling out functionality that allows Page owners and individual Facebook users to exchange private messages. Unlike on Twitter, where either party can initiate a direct message, Facebook is requiring that the individual initiate the conversation for now at least.

Lady Gaga2. It appears no one is safe from hacking as singer Lady Gaga has been the latest victim of a targeted attack on her Twitter and Facebook accounts. Multiple messages, seemingly from the singer, offered “free iPad2’s to each one of you”. Attached links directed more than 100,000 of her followers to a site requesting personal details, possibly as part of a phishing scam. The 25-year-old, Twitter’s most followed user, later tweeted: “Phew. The hacking is over!”

3. Facebook has been told to stop its practice of indefinitely retaining data about which adverts its 500 million users outside the US click on, following a review by the Irish data protection commissioner of its non-US operations. It has also agreed to take immediate steps over data collected from third-party sites when people use their Facebook identity to log in to them. Until now, that data about people’s behaviour was passed back to Facebook and retained indefinitely. Following the review, Facebook can keep the data but it has to make it anonymous.

Android4. Every day more than 700,000 people sign up for a new Android device, Google’s Android chief, Andy Rubin, said this week. That works out to nearly 5 million new Android users every week, which is about the equivalent of an iPhone 4S opening weekend every seven days. Rubin also clarified that Google’s 700,000 activations per day includes new devices only and not resold ones. “We count each device only once,” Rubin said in a follow-up post on Google+.

NHS15. Two NHS organisations have teamed for a Twitter campaign that will direct patients in London to the right services during the festive season. The 12-day ‘choose well’ tweeting initiative will begin on Christmas day, when both NHS London and NHS South West London – a strategic health authority and a primary care trust cluster – will tweet a rhyme about a seasonal ailment and the best place to get it treated during the holidays. People will be able to keep track of the tweets by following the hashtag #NHSXmas.

6. According to Twitter, the TV screening of the highly popular Anime Castle in the Sky in Japan earlier this month set a new record for the most tweets per second (TPS) on the service. The new high of 25,088 TPS smashes the previous record, which saw “nearly 9,000? tweets per second recorded following the announcement of Beyonce’s pregnancy.

Alwaleed7. Twitter received a $300 million investment from Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal (left) as it pushes through a redesign of its site to attract advertisers. Alwaleed, who leads the 2011 Arab Rich List, and his investment company agreed to buy a “strategic stake” in Twitter, Kingdom Holding said today. A strategic holding means more than 3 percent, Ahmed Halawani, a Kingdom Holding director, said in an interview. That would give the San Francisco-based company a valuation exceeding $10 billion.

8. Instagram has posted its first in a series of 2011 review posts, listing the top locations that people shared with their photos. The top 15 locations showed heavy usage on the West coast, California specifically, with top spots being Disneyland, AT&T Park, and airports in San Francisco and Los Angeles.Tupac

9. Paul Rayment, a PR manager based in Leeds, has come up with yet another interesting and unique use for Foursquare. He’s using the check-in service to map out the history of rappers. Starting out with Tupac Shakur (right), Rayment has documented the milestones in the rapper’s life, starting out with his performance at the Apollo Theatre. The tour then takes users through Tupac’s high school years, the location where he signed his record deal with Death Row Records, and of course, as is to be expected, passes through the site of the shooting that took Tupac’s life.

10. Last but not least, we’d personally like to thank all of you who’ve read, retweeted and enjoyed this blog over the past year – we’ll be back in 2012 to continue to keep you updated on all that’s hot in the world of social media. If 2012’s anything like 2011, there’ll be a lot to keep you in the loop about. Please take some time to view our Christmas Card and an update of our work this year.

All the team at Umpf

Social Media Digest: PostRank Purchased, Baidu Spends & Instagram Wins

Friday, December 9th, 2011

Welcome back to our latest instalment of what’s hot in the world of social media. In case you missed it, here’s what happened over the last week:

Postrank1. Google has announced that is has bought PostRank, the online social media analysts. A message on their homepage reads: “We’re proud of what we’ve accomplished, and we now look forward to working with Google’s team to build more useful tools for measuring engagement online, and we’ll be sure to share details on our progress in the coming months.” Whether this will lead to further analytics tools for the web remains to be seen.

2. Chinese search engine Baidu will reportedly spend nearly a half-billion dollars to bring small businesses online and, among other things, train 100,000 search marketing professionals in China. As reported by both NASDAQ and AMP, Baidu will make a $470 million investment in China’s online market between now and the end of 2015.

3. Mark Zuckerberg fell foul of his own social media platform this week when it was revealed that a glitch in the security systems meant his private photos became public property. Whilst the photos were limited to holding a live chicken, killing said chicken and eating said chicken’s remains, the world tuned in to see behind the veil and glimpse the private life of the man who has made all of ours public.Zuckerberg

4. Twitter has unveiled a new look today, features of which will be rolled out over the coming weeks. The general idea is to grow revenue through advertising. “We have to provide the simplest and fastest way for people around the world to connect to everything they care about,” Twitter Chief Executive Dick Costolo said as he introduced the new version of the site at an event at the company’s future headquarters in San Francisco.

5. Apple has released its annual iTunes Rewind, a look back at the most popular content available in the App Store over the past year. This year, top honors went to photo-sharing app Instagram, which Apple named “iPhone App of the Year.” As Apple’s reigning favorite, the app will be featured prominently in the App Store and is likely to see a significant surge in downloads. Instagram lets you shoot photos, apply polaroid-like filters and share your creations on Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and other popular social networks.

Social Media Ouch Map is a World-First and Award-winner – Case Study

Friday, December 9th, 2011

DADI 1Our social media Ouch Map has been busy picking up awards on the winter circuit recently, scooping a DADI award (right) for ‘Financial Services Campaign or Website’. We are delighted that our creation was recognised amongst a very competitive field as being both innovative and great to look at. Since the DADI win, the Ouch Map has gone on to receive runner-up (commendation) at the national Social Buzz awards and also be shortlisted for CIPR PRide award at last month’s ceremony in Leeds.

But how did we get here? What inspired the Ouch Map? How did we come to create it? Well, the answer is very simple; responding to a client’s needs with a creative and original idea.

When online health insurer, Health365.com, approached us to launch their brand across the UK, we worked with them to define some very specific objectives: drive traffic to the new site, using social media in particular to generate sales and to make health insurance (generally considered to be a dry subject) appealing and accessible to tech savvy 25 – 40 year olds.

As with every piece of work we execute for our clients, we keep objectives at the forefront of our minds when coming up with creative ideas.

Ouch Map - skeletonIn response, our solution was to launch the world’s first ‘Ouch Map’ a fun, interactive social media experiment that would map minor injuries and see which parts of the body Brits hurt most. We proposed the Ouch Map as an interactive and social media friendly way to monitor those minor in real-time using an interactive Twitter app and a glowing skeleton. We believed the Ouch Map would also enable Health365.com to achieve the primary objective of making online health insurance more interesting and accessible, whilst boosting site traffic and sales.

The beauty behind the Ouch Map and where it really stood out was that it would be a world first as well, not just in terms of functionality, but also in terms of data; whilst information on more serious accidents and injuries involving hospitals and GPs is more readily available, we recognised that less was known about the more frequent and often annoying bumps and bruises, grazes and scuffs that do not require medical assistance.

OuchmapscreengrabWe devised the glowing skeleton as a suitable ‘map’ onto which twitter users’ data could be pictorially represented. The fantastic visuals and coding for the job were produced by Ben Marsh whose work speaks for itself. Those having an ‘ouch’ moment are able to use the hashtag #ouch365, indicating the part of the body and the scale of the pain experienced from 1 – 10. E.g. ‘#ouch365 grazed left knee 7’.

The injury was then logged real-time on the interactive human skeleton at www.health365.com/ouchmap with participants’ pain data being used to light up the bones of the human body in accordance with the level of pain experienced, with green being low-level pain and red being a severe ‘ouch moment’.

To fulfill Health365.com’s desire to build traffic and sales we decided that the Ouch Map should sit on the Health365.com website and be just one click away from the homepage, meaning the traffic from users of the Ouch Map was directed towards generating additional sales for the company as well.

As nice as we think the Ouch Map looks, this is primarily to serve the objectives that we devised with Health365.com. For us, the most important aspect of the Ouch Map’s success (and where certain social media campaigns fall short) is that it enabled Health365.com to hit and far exceed all of these objectives.

Health365 Ouchmap middleSince the Ouch Map launched and in the subsequent months, traffic to the Health365.com trebled with the monthly sales average of policies doubling over the same period. What’s more, targeting the 25 – 40 year old age bracket has been achieved through the Ouch Map, with the average age of Health365.com policy holders sitting within this demographic.

If you are interested in talking to us about our social media campaigns, you can read about more here and please get in touch by email. We’d love to talk to you. Who knows, yours could be the next award-winning social media campaign that we devise.

Social Media Digest:Instagram grows, Twitter’s Arabic & Linkedin Share Plunge

Friday, November 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 a run-down of our top four:

Twitter arabic1. Arabic is the fastest growing language on Twitter as of October 2011 and is now the eighth most used language on the popular social networking website, a study showed Thursday. The Paris-based Semiocast released an analysis on the language shares on Twitter, surveying 5.6 billion public messages gathered between July 1, 2010 and Oct. 31, 2011. “More than 2 million public messages were posted ever day on Twitter in Arabic, from about 30,000 in July 2010 [out of 5.6 billion tweets],” the study said.

2. Instagram now has 13 million users, just 13 months after it was launched and shows no sign of slowing down. The small company has just seven employees and grabbed another million users last month and now boasts well over 13 million application users, co-founder Kevin Systrom confirmed.

3. In what could be the first signs of the bursting dotcom 2 bubble, shares of LinkedIn fell 6.7% on Monday.The lockup expiration has been on investors’ minds, as four company insiders have already said they are cashing out in a second offering of stock. Meanwhile, LinkedIn is selling 1.3 million of its own shares in that offering. Those announcements don’t inspire confidence in a stock that’s been criticized for overvaluation since its IPO. LinkedIn shares are down almost 23% over the month, and 15% over the past week alone. Linkedin

4. The number of people accessing social media websites and apps on their mobile phones has increased by 44 per cent in the past 12 months, new figures show. Providing an insight into the changing ways that consumers both interact with each other and use technology, the comScore study revealed that in the five leading European markets (France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK), 55.1 million people used their phones for social media. Figures also reveal that the rate of growth in the use of social networking on a daily basis has risen beyond the growth rate of first-time adoption.

Images kindly sourced from:

1. http://startupmeme.com/artwitter-the-twitter-in-arabic/

2. http://www.b2bsocialmediaguide.com/2011/11/02/linkedin-company-status-updates/

Social Media Digest: Facebook Tracks, Foursquare Revamp & Cowell Tweets

Friday, November 18th, 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 a run-down of our top five:Virgin Atlantic

1. Virgin Atlantic is offering customers a ‘tweet bit’ service allowing them to get flight status updates via micro-blogging site Twitter.The @VAAInfo account takes customer queries about their flight and offers a response “within seconds” the airline said. Fergus Boyd, head of e-commerce, at Virgin Atlantic, said: “We now have over 50,000 Twitter followers worldwide and we know that many of them use the social network to keep abreast of travel news and updates.”

2. X Factor supremo Simon Cowell has finally joined Twitter – although so far he’s mainly just winding up Piers Morgan and rival judges Nicole Scherzinger, Paula Abdul and LA Reid. After dozens of spoof and fake accounts, Cowell finally gave in and joined the social networking site with the words: ‘It’s official, I know it’s taken a while. It’s really me! We’re live in 10 minutes. I’ll keep you posted. Lots of love #iamsimon’ Fans hoping Simon would continue his infamous caustic criticism online weren’t disappointed – having joined just in time for the X Factor USA live show, his second tweet provided the perfect opportunity to make a dig at his rival judges.

Foursquare3. Foursquare has revamped its popular badge system in an effort to increase user engagement and encourage exploration. Starting Monday, Foursquare’s core 24 category badges will begin leveling up based on users’ checkins. A numerical icon now appears on the bottom right of badges such as “JetSetter,” “Wino” and “Great Outdoors”, indicating how often users have checked in to places related to those badges. “It’s rewarding exploration and awarding expertise,” says Foursquare Head of Product Alex Rainert. “It’s a platform to showcase tastemakers and get their content exposed.”

4. Despite the fact services and apps like Instagram, Twitpic and PicPlz are growing in popularity on our mobile devices, it seems that more users are uploading photos to the micro-blogging platform via Twitter’s own photo service instead. According to new research featured on ZDNet, Twitter’s fairly new photo sharing service, which is powered by Photobucket, is now the number one way users put their photos onto the social network.

Facebook stalkerr5.  In a series of interviews with USAToday, Facebook has finally revealed  how it tracks users and non-users across the web, gathering huge amount  of data as it does so. ABCNews/USAToday said: “Facebook officials are now acknowledging that the social media giant has been able to create a running log of the web pages that each of its 800 million or so members has visited during the previous 90 days. Facebook also keeps close track of where millions more non-members of the social network go on the Web, after they visit a Facebook web page for any reason.”

Images kindly sourced from:

1. http://www.air-valid.co.uk/virgin-atlantic-airways/event.html

2. http://www.simplyzesty.com/mobile/foursquare/whats-foursquare-simple-guide-power-user/

3. http://nexus404.com/Blog/2011/10/03/is-facebook-tracking-user-actions-on-other-websites-facebook-patent-application-indicates-tracking-on-other-domains-what-about-our-privacy/

Social Media Remembers – How Online Campaigns are Keeping the Memory Alive

Friday, November 11th, 2011

PoppiesSocial media has once again been at the forefront of this year’s remembrance campaign with the Royal British Legion leading a wide range of remembrance initiatives across Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube in a bid to appeal to the ‘Afghanistan generation’.

Fronted by Poppy, the virtual face of the Royal British Legion, the campaign has more than 10,000 Facebook and 11,000 Twitter followers and its own Legion Live portal hosting videos, blogs and images.

As well as being used as a platform to host content, the British Legion once again led the campaign for Twitter to fall silent for two minutes at 11am (#2minutesilence) this morning as a mark of respect for Remembrance Day.

Last year the British Legion saw its Remembrance Day iTunes single bring two minutes of silence to the charts. And in 2009 a mobile poppy app was launched featuring a virtual poppy which grows every day.

A number of other social media campaigns to honour veterans and communicate the First and Second World Wars have also been launched this year.

Faces of the First World WarThis week, The Imperial War Museum launched its Faces of the First World War campaign which today saw 100 previously unseen portraits of those who served in the First World War made public for the very first time via Flickr.

Photographs will continue to be uploaded every week day until the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of the First World War in August 2014.

Elsewhere a Twitter account (@RealTimeWWII) is reporting the events of world war two as it happened, minute by minute, for the next six years. Being led by Oxford graduate, Alwyn Collinson (24), the account has more than 73,000 followers and is being translated into Russian, Portuguese and Spanish.

Finally, this year’s PR Week Digital and Social Media Award went to the RAF Benevolent Fund for a social media campaign chronicling the events of the Battle of Britain. Set up as an online newspaper featuring daily news, pictures and video footage, blogs and Twitter feeds were also created for a number of fictional characters.

The campaign amassed 2,000 Twitter followers, 16,000 Facebook fans and the 1940 Chronicle has been chosen to become part of the British Library’s digital archive of British documentary heritage.

Google+ Pages; The War Hots Up

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

Google vs FacebookThe big news this week is the launch of Google+ pages; the chance for businesses to have their own ‘profiles’ on the rapidly growing ‘logged-in search masquerading as a social media platform’.

Whilst the dust is yet to settle on how businesses view the pages in terms of their functionality and general appeal, one thing is already certain; this is the latest salvo in the intergalactic war between Google and Facebook. Both parties are slogging it out to become the undisputed kings of the internet.

Granted, they started out on world domination from very different perspectives (one being straight-forward search, the other being straight-forward social media platform), but it’s very clear that the gap between them both is narrowing, and rapidly too.

Google+We’re yet to give our score out of ten to Google+ pages, but we think that’s perhaps not the most important thing at stake here. The pages are the clearest indicator yet that Google wishes to move into territory previously owned by Facebook and seek to wrest advertising revenue away from the social network. After all, with Facebook businesses and pages, Zuckerberg’s baby has enjoyed unparalleled growth without too  many commercial challenges. Now Facebook will have to fight harder to keep its place at the top, regardless of how well Google+ pages function.

What’s next then, in this rapidly intensifying war? Only time will tell, but one thing’s for sure, we’re witnessing one of the most heated fights in the history of the web for worldwide domination and we’ve all got front-row seats.New Picture (1)

Images sourced from:

1. http://winnersdelhinews.com/2011/07/big-fight-of-dinasaurs-google-and-facebook/

2. http://mashable.com/2011/06/28/google-plus/

3. http://www.boxfituk.com/index.php?act=latestNews