Posts Tagged ‘Facebook’

Introducing Facebook Places

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Yesterday, Facebook introduced its latest feature - Places.  Similar to Foursquare, Places is all about location; it allows users to share where they are with their friends, see who is near them and find new places around them. 

Unlike Foursquare though, Places is less about gaming (e.g. getting points for checking in at various venues, becoming mayor of a location, etc.) and it brings a new level of engagement to Facebook’s 500 million users vs. the fraction of that number who use Foursquare.  For now, though, this first version of Places is only being rolled out in the U.S., and Foursquare updates (as well as a few other services) will be integrated into Facebook Places.

Places can be accessed through Facebook’s most recent iPhone app or via touch.facebook.com on a smart phone.  Users can add places or check into places that already exist, check in by themselves or as a group by tagging friends, see which of their friends are in the same area and discover what places are around them.

Facebook posted this beautiful video to show how Places can improve our lives -

For marketers of companies with physical locations, it definitely presents a new engagement opportunity, allowing for targeted interaction with consumers right outside - or inside - their door.  For example, companies can send coupons and special offers to consumers who check in at or around a store, restaurant or theater, enticing them to make an immediate purchase.  Once a location has been added to Places, the business owner can claim its location’s page.

From a user standpoint, it will be interesting to see how people - including myself - feel about these added updates that will pop up on the Facebook newsfeed (the check-ins will also show up on the user’s profile and the location’s page).  If you already don’t care about half of what is posted on your newsfeed, you may not be interested in the fact that your friend Joe just checked in at Starbucks in Kansas City.  On the flip side, you may find out that your friend Mary, whom you haven’t seen since college, is at a store right down the street from you - prompting a spontaneously delightful reunion.

As always, it will be interesting to see where this latest social networking tool takes us…

Betty White to Host SNL (please?)!

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

A few months ago I received in invitation to become a friend of the group Betty White to Host SNL (Please?)! on Facebook.  Normally I automatically hit ignore for these types of Facebook invitations. Once you become a fan or friend of a page like this the never ending messages and reminders to take action promptly begin and never seem to end.  However, this campaign was completely different.  The creator of the page, a 29yearold man from San Antonio, watched the number of people friending his page increase way past his goal of 5,000 people.  The group, which became viral, ended up collecting over 514,000 friends, without annoying its members with messages and reminders.  This is a prime example of how to utilize Facebook or other social media outlets to generate a huge buzz for your brand without spending a lot of money (and not annoying or alienating your audience in the process).

 

This Saturday, the efforts of this viral campaign came to fruition when Betty White hosted the show, to rave reviews.  I recorded the show on my DVR, and my family and I watched the episode Sunday afternoon as part of our mother’s day festivities.  Although a little inappropriate at times, Betty did an amazing job (my favorite skit from the night is below) which is why I joined the group Betty White to Host the Oscars.  I figure…why not!

Pop Pays-it-Forward

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Can soda companies change the world?  At a time when the fight against childhood obesity is a weekly headline, companies seen as contributors to the problem, such as Pepsi and Coca-Cola, are spending major dollars trying to change how we perceive their brands. 

PepsiCo and Coca-Cola have both committed to developing healthier products and promoting healthier, more active lifestyle choices.  But those ideas can be a tough sell to consumers who love (or hate) their brands because of their bubbly, sugary, sweetness.  And both brands seem to be finding that an easier way to change their image might just be to change the world first.  PepsiCo is forgoing Super Bowl ads this year and running a major social media campaign called The Pepsi Refresh Project.  Through their website (refresheverything.com), Facebook page and YouTube Channel, Pepsi is encouraging people (young people, ideally) to do something good for their planet.  Individuals, groups and organizations can submit ideas that would positively impact their community and beyond.  Submissions are voted on by other viewers/entrants/participants - and Pepsi is giving monthly grants from $5K to $250K to help make those winning ideas a reality. 

 

Coca-Cola, who has had a longtime partnership with the Olympics, is promoting the first “zero-waste, carbon-neutral” Olympic sponsorship.  The company is making good on their sustainability vow by providing everything from emission-free soda coolers, to Olympic Village furniture made from salvaged pine-beetle epidemic wood, to dressing the staff in uniforms made from recycled bottles.  But days before the Opening Ceremonies, of course, is the Super Bowl - and Coca-Cola will be advertising.  Coke is running two spots as part of their Open Happiness campaign, which as the company puts it, is to remind people that “whenever they enjoy a Coca-Cola, they play a role in helping us make a difference in the lives of others.  By opening a Coke they create a happiness multiplier” (a “pay-it-forward with soda” theme, if you will).  Coke has also teamed up with Facebook to offer fans virtual gifts to send to friends and family.  Each virtual gift is matched by a $1 donation to  Boys & Girls Clubs of America, as well as giving the sender a sneak preview of the Super Bowl spots.  And their website, livepositively.com, further encourages visitors to get involved somehow, whether it’s donating to relief efforts in Haiti, recycling for the Green Schools program, or serving the community as part of the Sprite/MTV Step Off Challenge.

So are consumers going to swallow what some might call “propaganda”?  Or will the dollars spent translate into glowing halos around the brands?  In the end, does it really matter if the efforts positively impact individuals, communities and the environment?  I haven’t made up my mind — I’m a water drinker myself.

Yes, I will Yearbook Myself

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

I may have just found my new favorite Web site/time-suck : www.yearbookyourself.com. 

This incredibly addicting site lets you upload a picture of yourself (or someone else) to see what you’d look like with classic (read: ridiculous) hair styles and outfits in various high school yearbook photos from 1950 - 2000.  As an added bonus, it plays music that coincides with each year.

After discovering this ingenious site/time machine (and then promptly spending entirely too much time on it), I looked into its background and found out that apparently it was first introduced last fall by Taubman Centers, a national mall development company, and has just recently been reintroduced - just in time for the new school year.  This makes perfect sense considering the site also offers discounts from a variety of retailers at Taubman malls across the country.  The new version also offers Facebook integration that allows you to post your photo directly to your Facebook page.

To Taubman and their agency (Minneapolis-based Colle+McVoy), kudos on the ingenuity behind the site and the ‘09 edition!  To anyone who hasn’t already yearbooked themselves, beware and enjoy.  It’s seriously awesome.   

Feel free to share your best (or preferably worst) yearbook photos online - we’d love to see them!  Or if you’d rather email them to me, perhaps I could create a commemorative 50th anniversary Mixed Nuts yearbook for a future post…

Here’s a random sampling of some MSI nuts (well, the PR team + Christos for now) throughout the decades…

Gaelen Bell

Gaelen Bell

MaryAileen Bell

MaryAileen Bell

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Maureen Brennan

Maureen Brennan

Mandy Meszaros

Mandy Meszaros

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 

Christos Ellis

Christos Ellis

Emily Towey

Emily Towey

 

Facebook FYI

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Just a quick note for all of you Facebook users - in case you haven’t already heard, Facebook has agreed to let third-party advertisers use your posted pictures in ads displayed on your friends’ Facebook pages.  Not a fan?  Here are a few quick, simple steps to avoid it: 

– Click on SETTINGS up at the top of the page where you see the log out link.

– Select PRIVACY.

– Then select NEWS FEEDS AND WALL.

– Next select the tab that reads FACEBOOK ADS.

– Select NO ONE in the drop-down box.

– Then SAVE your changes.

 zpq85anct7

 

 

 

 

That Was So Five Minutes Ago

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

With the avalanche of change that has infected our lifestyles “That was so five minutes ago,” has apparently become the new statement of status among the earliest of early adopters.

This was told to me by MSI’s social media team led by Maureen Brennan, which is quickly changing the face of MSI and energizing us with a new zeal to be in the vanguard. (I am now on Facebook and Twitter, and am blogging. Hello?)

If you think of 70 years as one generation (it has been attainable throughout recorded history…Cicero’s wife lived to 103 after he divorced her) then only three such generations ago, nothing much had changed from the previous 4,000 years.

caesar-georgeCaesar when he was in a great rush could travel 50 miles a day, sometimes a little more, and George Washington almost 18 centuries later rarely did as well.   It wasn’t until the high pressure steam engine emerged in the early 1800s that living conditions for the average person really began to change, starting with travel.  And that change accelerated with all the new things that followed including electricity, the telegraph, flight, industrialization, radio, television, new medicines and the computer, to name a few. But that took place over a period of about 150 years.

Now it seems that every month, or even every week we are jolted with something new, and some of us can adapt to it better than others.

It appears that like all human characteristics, our ability to accept change can be placed on a simple scale of one to ten.  The ones of the world will only change their lifestyles on the threat of death…and that might not be enough. The tens have anxiety attacks if they can’t get the very next thing right now.  Most of us are somewhere in the middle of the scale, with the younger demographic, I suspect, well above the six level.

There is an evolutionary theory that helps explain this.  Those who are low on the scale who fight change bank their status on what they know.  If they give into change they believe they lose status because now they are following the crowd.    Those high on the scale bank their status on being the earliest of early adopters. They can’t wait to tell you what they are doing that’s new. And believe me, they’ll tell you.

This is definitely not the time to be near the bottom of the scale if we want to engage life as it is becoming.

pintofbeerview1What’s really mind boggling is trying to conjecture what activity in the year 2050 might be described as that was so five minutes ago.  If you are ever sitting alone in a bar staring at your drink, this is a good subject to ponder.

 

 

 

 

Confessions of a Facebook Addict

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

Addicted To Facebook

After reading the article “Help I’m Addicted to Facebook!” by Tara Stiles, I started to think about how my life has been affected by social media.

I am not new to the phenomenon, and have actually had my Facebook account since my sophomore year of college.  In the 5+ years I have had my account, I would say that I have gone through several stages of the site architecture and levels of addiction.  Which seems to be typical for most Gen-Yers, like myself.  Many of my symptoms are similar to those addressed in Stiles’ article as well.

My addiction started off as a simple way to keep in touch with classmates and to learn more about the ones I hadn’t yet spoken to.  It soon transitioned into a way for me to post pictures and share them with friends. It made it so much easier to keep in touch with important people in my life who had moved away for school. 

As time went on and the network and its offerings grew, so did the amount of time I spent on the site.  I feel as though the Facebook beast really reared its ugly head when it introduced many of the new features novice users take for granted. The news feed, status updates, applications, video offerings, etc. have made it even harder to avoid the attractiveness of Facebook.

This is when marketers also started to take notice of the potential opportunities Facebook has to offer.  The options for marketers in the beginning were limited, but Facebook has finally tried to embed advertisements on the sly.  It has disguised them by making them gifts, part of the news feed, groups, etc.  This provides a great opportunity for us as marketers and for our clients as well. Although it also proves to be another way my Facebook addiction is manipulating and controlling my life!

Whether you are a user, hater, novice or addict like me, it is important to understand the significance Facebook has on popular culture, and for marketers it is important to learn how to blur the lines of content and advertising to maximize the effectiveness of your marketing efforts.

My Top 10 Facebook Addiction Symptoms

  1. I have downloaded Facebook to my phone, which means I am ALWAYS connected
  2. I check my Facebook before I get out of bed in the morning (along with the weather and my horoscope… a bad combination of the three could mean I stay in bed all day!)
  3. Facebook creeping/spying has ruined my last 3 relationships (and caused many lapses in sanity)
  4. I work on the MSI Social Media Team.  My addiction has become part of my job… living the dream!
  5. I update my status at least 3-5 times a day
  6. Cocktails and Facebook don’t mix! (enough said)
  7. I have friends that are afraid to end relationships because of the inevitable barrage of questions they will have to answer after changing their relationship status on Facebook (by friends I mean me)
  8. Facebook is my homepage on my laptop
  9. I no longer say “CHEESE” when taking pictures, instead I say “Profile Picture”
  10. I wrote this post in PMS Facebook blue