Some thoughts on Social Media from Jake McKee captured during a recent visit to Seattle where he dropped by Visible Technologies and came to the re-start of Social Media Club Seattle. Jack and Sean O’Driscoll run Ant’s Eye View a growing social media firm focused on communities and voice of the customer. They just announced today that Sean MacDonald formerly of Dell is joining them to head up business in Austin. Nice move both. Thanks for stopping by and sharing your thoughts Jake. Congrats on the growing success of the firm. We enjoy working with you guys.
Entries Tagged 'Consumer Generated Media' ↓
Thoughts on Social Media from Jake McKee
3.30.09 by Blake Cahill {Blake Cahill, Consumer Generated Media, Social Media}
Thoughts on Social Media from Chris Pirillo
3.27.09 by Blake Cahill {Blake Cahill, Consumer Generated Media, Social Media}
If you don’t know Chris you should. He’s a one man social media machine based here in Seattle. Recently, I was able to catch up with Chris during a Social Media Club Seattle event and get some of his thoughts on social and the where the space is headed. His Gnomedex conferences are infamous for the people and content he brings together. If you never been to one of them you should. Thanks for stopping by Chris.
Visible Technologies wins WTIA Award - Our Own Case Study in Online WOM
3.26.09 by Blake Cahill {Blake Cahill, Consumer Generated Media, Interactive Marketing, New Media, Social Media, Word of Mouth Marketing}
Last night the Washington Technology Industry Association (WTIA) had their annual awards event where Visible Technologies TruCast solution was nominated for best commercial product of the year. It was a tremendous honor to have even been a finalist. And even greater that we won.
The amazing thing about this years judging was that the instead of the usual jury of peers and industry folks - the vote was put out to the community!
As a technology provider that enables many leading brands the ability to listen, measure, and engage with their customers we were being put to that same test about getting our own community of advocates to vote for us. I can’t thank the community, our employees, friends and supporters for all the outreach, emails, forwards, tweets, re-tweets, LinkedIn and Facebook updates. The community really came through for us and we were up against at least one firm that had 10 times the number of employees we have. It just goes to show that bigger doesn’t necessarily always win and that the power of your community can deliver amazing results for your if interact regularly, add value and appreciate their interaction.
Again, thank you for all the support.
Highlights from Sponsored Research with Aberdeen Group
3.24.09 by Blake Cahill {Blake Cahill, Brand Management, Consumer Generated Media, New Media, Social Media}
Marketers are finally moving into Social Media. It’s been taking a while. Even though millions of users are flocking to social media sites every day, most marketers have stayed away or only been experimenting. Twitter year over year grow exceeded 1300% in a recently published article on site and user growth. Many marketers and organizations either didn’t understand the opportunities inherent in this channel or the how to’s required to join the conversations–without sounding like product/brand pushers.
Things are finally starting to change. Companies are learning how to leverage social media and tap into the rising tide of consumers participating in social network sites, blogs, wikis and Twitter.
According to the “The ROI on Social Media Marketing” report from the Aberdeen Group, that we (Visible Technologies) sponsored, marketers have developed the tools and methodologies to drive marketing ROI by listening to and learning from customers and prospects. As so, the dollars are following this rising tide.
The Aberdeen report found that 63% of the companies in their survey (defined as best-in-class) planned to increase their social media marketing budgets this year.

“Companies use multiple approaches to identify the individuals who wield the greatest amount of influence in any given topic area and to track changes in their influence over time,” said Jeff Zabin of Aberdeen. “Best-in-class companies engage these top influencers as brand evangelists, and then track the impact of their words and actions in terms of return on marketing investment.”
eMarketer estimated that social network advertising alone will rise over 17% this year to $2.35 billion, up from $2 billion in 2008.

But simply because companies are increasing their spending on social media doesn’t mean all the drawbacks have disappeared. Measurement, in particular, is a sticking point.
The Aberdeen research showed that 39% of companies found it somewhat difficult to measure social media, and 20% said it was very difficult.

Please feel free to download the entire report here.
Why Twitter Continues to in Grow Importance
3.10.09 by Blake Cahill {Blake Cahill, Consumer Generated Media, Forrester, Interactive Marketing, New Media, Social Media}
There are many who continue to question Twitter, its increasing importance to consumers and brands, or its overall monetization strategies. But, the data of user growth is staggering and brand participation and initial results from brand interaction more than promising. So many brands that we know and interact with like Microsoft, Alaska Air, Southwest, Wachovia, Dell, PCC Markets and others are doing a great job at building loyal followings, creating real-time communication platforms with customers, and the ability to target marketing specials. These interactions and the follower base are what is generating revenue and cost savings — creating more traction than fan pages of yesteryear did for many brands in places like FaceBook or MySpace.
So, this is why Twitter is and will continue to be valuable. In a recent article from Joe Marchese at SocialVibe he writes “Why Google Will Buy Twitter and Make Billions”. Google’s success has been its ability to “organize information on the Web (search results) and to monetize people’s intentions (marketing based on what people are searching for). Simply put, Google is a multibillion-dollar company because it can put marketers in front of people at the right time in the right way. Google has cornered the market on searching the Web for information, and monetizing that behavior.”
Twitter is the growing consumer interaction channel of choice and is now introducing search functionality that when honed and perfected as Joe says “will bring with it all the riches of search marketing…and will make Twitter worth billions — and why Google will (or at least should) buy Twitter.” The power in Twitter conversations is that it will “help people find out where to find current discussions on a subject.” Now what is that worth to marketers and advertisers? Just as Google has been able to monetize around the traffic of search terms Twitter will be able to monetize around events, passions, concerns, etc. Joe writes “People are already fascinated by watching people discuss various events or topics live in real time, using Twitter search and # (hash tags). What these services do is to provide me with information (a stream of people’s thoughts) on any keyword, or series of keywords. Sound familiar.”
Well, if it worked for Google then it could and should work for Twitter. “Google has proven that if you can provide a useful search experience, then you can provide useful marketing. If you can provide useful marketing, you can return amazing ROI for marketers. If you can provide amazing ROI for marketers, you can make a lot of money, say Joe.”
All these consumer and business conversations be it on Twitter, FaceBook, MySpace, and LinkedIn platforms are where brands and digital investment will continue to flow. The need for marketers and organizations to understand this new landscape and to build and deploy the people, processes, and technologies to interact with these new channels is impertative. See my post from a few weeks back with some ‘09 predictions and comments from a Forrester Report.
Nice article Joe. I agree with you about the opportunity for Twitter or the next platform that may emerge.
