Connected World Radio: Celebrity Twitter

Celebrities have invaded twitter, but are they getting the most out of it or missing out on a golden opportunity to connect with fans?

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Connected World Radio: I Don't Have Time

One of the more common things I hear from clients is that they don’t have time to do social media. But how much time to you have to marke your business? Guess what, social media is the new marketing. Let’s work together to find a way.

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The Shaq Effect

There are all kind of people on Twitter. Many take the names of famous people and twitter as them. With more and more celebrities joining Twitter, it has become sometimes hard to figure out which is the real person. So when I got this tweet from “The Real Shaq” I was dubious.

therealshaqI immediately figured this was some kid joking around, so I blocked the account and went on with my life. After all, I don’t know Shaq and I certainly didn’t send him any pictures. The next day I get an email from a writer at a real estate trade pub in Seattle asking for an interview about social media and real estate. After the interiew I ask her where she found me and not to my surprise she says Twitter and then this blog. Then she asks me if I have heard of “The Real Shaq” on Twitter. I relay the story of the odd Twitter of the past day and she tells me that no, in fact, this really is Shaquille O’Neal. It turns out two bloggers from Phoenix found him out one day and confirmed the account is his. This is how she found me on Twitter; because she was following The_Real_Shaq.

The results of this mis-tweet: With over 100,000 followers, alot of people saw my name pop up on their radar. I got an interview as a social media expert. My followers on Twitter jumped dramatically in just two days. I also added several LinkedIn connections and picked up many new readers to the blog. Many more people who did not know I was a social media professional now do. That’s all good, all due to the Shaq Effect.

shaq-effect

Connected World Radio: The Business of YouTube

It turns out YouTube is more than just skateboarding dogs and people falling down stairs. Business is being transacted, but you must treat your customers with respect and engage them on the new technology platforms. What you can learn from Warner Music Group and Monty Python.

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Twitter is like a ball of clay

One of the most challenging things I do as a social media consultant is try to explain Twitter to clients. Most people have an immediate and pretty consistent reaction to Twitter at first. “That’s the dumbest thing I have ever seen” “I don’t get it at all, why would I ever want to do that?” I hear it all the time and guess what? I said the very same things when I first discovered Twitter. I resisted Twitter myself for a long time. I eventually decided as a social media expert I couldn’t simply dismiss something out of hand with out trying it first, so I dived in. Only by adding friends and experiencing Twitter first hand did I begin to understand the power and usefulness.

I’m not sure Twitter is something that can be explained at this point. As I said to a recent client, look, Twitter is like a ball of clay. It’s nothing really, but also everything. It’s whatever you make of it and different people do different things with it. It’s one of the aspects that makes it so hard to explain. Is there alot of flack and nonesence on Twiter, sure. But that’s not the sum total of the Twitter experience. If you focused on certain aspects of a knife, you might say it’s a dangerous wepon that can ingure of kill. Why would I ever want to use one. But, of course, that’s not the sum total experience of a knife. Most people use it as an important tool to prepare food. Don’t let the trivial aspects of Twitter fool you, there is serious marketing, PR and branding going on on Twitter daily. Major corporations are starting to figure it out such as ToysRUs, Dell, and Ford. They are listening, engading and making a difference with real customers. My friend and social media cohort Ron Ploof wrote a terrific e-book on how Ford’s Scott Monty used Twitter to put to rest a potentially very damaging PR firestorm. ToysRUs did a great job over the Christmas holiday season answering customers questions on toys, availabiity and other customer issues. A more enjoyable experience than waiting on hold endlessly.

Not every social media tool is right for every business or every situation, so the first thing to do is determine is Twitter is right for your business. Then, think about a strategy based on a clear purpose and outcome. How will you mold the Twitter clay? Is it a branding tool, customer service, a listening post? How can you provide value and service to your followers? If you don’t like the sillyness of Twitter, than come on in and start adding value.

Flight To Open Source

Weather it’s attributable to a fear of Google Open Social or increasingly savvy executives there is a real movement to open up social network platforms. Facebook has been the hottest network of late but is also once of the most closed and restricted. Not anymore as Facebook announces an open platform. Not to be outdone, Myspace also has plans to open it’s code. What the open platforms will do is enable outside developers to create extensions and addons to these services. New features will not be solely at the mercy of the original developer.

Within five years it’s going to be hard to run any kind of web service or application that is not open source, or at least provide a strong set of open API’s. This is part of the new paradigm of Internet business. Open Source has been around for years, but only now it is really starting to take hold. This is partly why Google has the strategic advantage over Microsoft as we move into the future. Open Source is built into the Google DNA. Microsoft has been built on the concept of proprietary systems and control. Buying Yahoo makes sense for Microsoft not just for their search advertising program, but for the Yahoo culture and philosophy. Yahoo also has Open Source built in. If Microsoft would allow some of that to seep in, it could benefit them emencly.

Social Media Morning 5/16/08

Penthouse Magazine embraces new media and becomes a social network company.

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I Dig Sprout

Web widgets are one of the hot topics of 2008. Sprout is a company I found recently that makes creating and publishing widgets super easy. Everything is based on Flash technology which gives your widget a lot of power and flexibility. The interface for creating sprouts couldn’t be easier and there are built in components that make adding things like rss feeds, Twitter and audio files easy. The program also does everything needed to prepare the widget for publishing on a wide variety of web sites. I love tools that empower the common person to harness the Internet in more powerful ways and Sprout certainly fits that bill in the widget category.

Seesmic Video WordPress Plugin

Seesmic is already an interesting video platform but this new WordPress plugin takes things to the next level. {seesmic_video:{“url_thumbnail”:{“value”:”http://t.seesmic.com/thumbnail/YDCHJRXiqP_th1.jpg”}”title”:{“value”:”Seesmic Video WordPress Plugin ”}”videoUri”:{“value”:”http://www.seesmic.com/video/53MaznvsaV”}}}

Will Second Life Go The Way Of Friendster?

Social networks are among the hottest technologies in 2008, but one of the early pioneers is only a distant memory. Friendster is one the first social networks and in it’s day it was the hottest thing since sliced bread. But as social networking matured and more services come online, Friendster failed to keep up and faded into insignificance. Part of the problem for Friendster was the fact that it was a general purpose social network in the midst of ever more niche social networks. MySpace focused on music, LinkedIn on business professionals. Now with Ning, individuals can create their own social network on any topic they wish. Facebook could be called an exception to this rule as it is a general purpose network, but they began life and created momentum as a focused social network for the college crowd. Facebook as also been very good at aggressively innovating their platform, especially with the addition of Facebook Applications.

Something similar is happening in the virtual world space. Second Life has been the dominating leader up to now, but the bloom may be coming off the rose. There is lots of competition in the virtual world space and much of it is of the niche variety. Disney purchased Club Penguin. Webkinz is incredibly hot, and now Nickelodeon is experimenting with a virtual world. There are also virtual world platform companies that will allow anyone to create their own virtual world. Sound familiar? Second Life is the general purpose virtual world with no real focus. It also seems to have lived out its 15 minutes of fame. I think if Second Life doesn’t do something dramatic they will end up like Friendster, an innovator that became insignificant.