Thursday 29 March 2012

Humanize Your Brand On Social Media tips By SagarGanatra



Marketers are suckers for a catch phrase, from “join the conversation” to “think like a publisher.” Now, thanks largely to Facebook Timeline for brand pages, the new marketing slogan has quickly become, “humanize the brand.”
Humanizing a brand simply means trying to interact with each customer on a personal level. But for a company to implement that style, there needs to be a shift in how it responds to customers, particularly via social media. Here are 10 ways to get started.

1. Think Like a Social Network


I recently asked Alfredo Tan, Senior Director of Facebook Canada, if the company distinguishes between business and consumer brand pages. “We don’t draw a distinction between your mom and a bar of soap,” he says. Social media is egalitarian. If the world’s largest social network believes companies and people are on equal footing, maybe you should, too.

2. Start With Staff


In Smart Business, Social Business, author Michael Brito writes, “while many organizations are trying desperately to humanize their brand, they are failing to understand that they need to humanize their business first.” In other words, your employees are the most authentic expression of your brand. Start with them. Take Maya Grinberg, a social media manager with social commerce platform Wildfire Interactive. Grinberg features in-office traditions, such as cheeky “spirit days” when staff plays dress-up, and heads to the company’s social channels as a way to generate conversation with fans about their own corporate cultures. She says posts about Wildfire’s inner workings are consistently among the company’s most popular updates.

3. Keep the Suits in Check


Not in all cases, but certainly in many, it’s a good idea to keep executives off of company social media accounts. It’s just that, often, the executive team is simply too far removed from the daily customer experience to understand how to best interact with them. That’s not something any company wants floating around online.

4. Create Access


Maybe you can’t invite everyone into the boardroom, but you can give them access to other parts of your business. Few social strategists understand their audience better than Liz Philips of golf giant TaylorMade. “We are, first and foremost, golfers,” Philips says. The company expresses this identity by sponsoring a TaylorMade PGA tour van that travels to weekly PGA events with a correspondent who live tweets to followers.

5. Treat Customers as Partners


Some brands treat their customers as the face of the company. Levi’s, for example, has created an entire series of videos featuring customers in their products. They’ve also developed a line that meets the needs of a key customer group: urban bike riders. Levi’s has moved beyond conversing with customers on social networks to co-creating content, even products, with them.

6. Reach Out To Key Individuals


While searching for a new SUV, small business owner, Marc Girolimetti, received a surprising phone call from Alan Mulally, CEO of Ford Motor Company. Mulally had organized a special test drive of the company’s new Edge Crossover for Girolimetti, at the urging of social strategist Scott Monty. Not only did Girolimetti go on to buy the vehicle, but thanks to his highly connected network, his positive experience spread quickly online.

7. Own Your Mistakes


Want to prove your brand is human? Admit when the company makes a mistake. During a panel on brand journalism at South by Southwest, Twitter’s editorial director, Karen Wickre, said making such an admission should be ‘on message’ for every company.

8. Put Your Fans to Work


Remember that loyal fans are often willing to do some of the heavy lifting for your brand. Cisco Systems created a sticky community on Facebook called the Cisco Networking Academy, where it gives its passionate and knowledgeable fans moderator privileges.

9. Be Open to Debate


People periodically argue. Likewise, a brand should be willing to engage in public debate. When a competitor attempted to recruit Eloqua’s entire sales team on LinkedIn, we were unsure of what to make of the situation. Was it a clever use of social media? We didn’t know, so we took the debate public by asking our blog readers what they thought. The post’s transparency, a hallmark of a humanizing a brand, resulted in a groundswell of public support.

10. Be Present


Creating a social media presence is essentially an invitation for dialogue. Brands that foster the culture and processes required to engage in widespread conversations can create vibrant customer communities. Those that don’t might be better off with no social presence at all. The reason: to be on social media but not present on social media is a broken promise.

Wednesday 28 March 2012

Classic Gadgets Upcycled Into Fashion Accessories

Tuesday 27 March 2012

Skype Meets Google+ Hangouts by SagarGanatra



At the moment, the site is marketed as a platform for public figures — or aspiring public figures. But they said it’s also a tool for anyone with something to discuss.
Here’s how it works: Say you want to host a channel about blogging, you can schedule live conversations at any time and moderate who speaks. If you connect the tool to Facebook and Twitter, the site automatically shares the time of the chat to Facebook friends and Twitter followers.
Another cool feature — there’s no limit to how many people can be in the queue to ask questions. To help ensure the quality of the site, the designers implemented “aggressive checks,” including a requirement that anyone who signs up must have at least 25 Facebook friends to ensure they’re a real person and not a spambot.
Right now, the site is free to everyone and, unlike Google+ Hangouts, there’s no plugin requirement (Hangouts requires a 13.6MB install). As the team tests the site with new users, they plan to fix any quirks and add additional features such as the ability to record and save live chats.
Schwarzapel sees lots of uses for OnTheAir. “Bloggers could host discussions with their readers,” he says. “Small businesses could release a new product and talk to their customers about it. Users can join the already happening discussions with technology and social media experts.”
The team received $880,000 in seed funding this year from IronPort Cofounder Scott Banister, About.Me Cofounder and CEO Tony Conrad (via True Ventures), StockTwits Cofounder and CEO Howard Lindzon, Triple Point Ventures President Ben Narasin, and Euclid Analytics Founder and CEO Will Smith.
In addition, the team is closely advised by Lean Startup Author Eric Ries, About.Me Cofounder Ryan Freitas and others.
There are already several sites similar to OnTheAir: Sean Parker’s Airtime and StubHub Founder Jeff Fluhr’s Spreecast.
What do you think about OnTheAir? Will you use it? Tell us in the comments.

Authentic Online Engagement Tips by SagarGanatra





If you want your brand’s social media efforts to come across as authentic, you need to know what you stand for and what’s meaningful to you. In other words, authentic social communication requires you to be honest about what your brand represents, what you have to offer, where your weaknesses are, and what’s really important to your audience.

If you’re not listening and engaging in a candid manner, you run the risk of having a message that doesn’t resonate, or worse, creates a backlash, calling into question not just what you’re trying to say via social media, but across all outbound communication channels. For a brand, that’s bad news. Here are four tips for keeping your social-media outreach authentic.

1. Focus On The Individual


Your people are your greatest asset when it comes to social media because they offer a real human perspective rather than a pre-packaged marketing message. The problem is social media can get stripped of its authenticity by strict brand guidelines that mandate an omniscient company voice. Instead, imbue your social channels with the many unique individuals who work for the company. Think of your audience in the same way. Don’t assume that they are a homogenous mass. This will help you develop a social communications plan that takes into consideration whether this audience is just getting to know your brand or if they are loyal followers. As individuals, we speak differently to different people. Remember that a brand is no different.

2. Listen Up!


It’s impossible to tap into sentiment without a system for listening. As brand communicators, we need to constantly have an ear out for changes in the consumer landscape and be tuned into what’s important to our audience. For example, a key group influencing the tech industry is millennials, which loosely includes consumers born between 1980 and 2000. You might think you already know it all when it comes to millennials: that they’re all rebels, that their values are vastly different from their parents, and that they’re obsessed with changing the world. In reality, when you listen to young people today through research, you find that they defy those traditional stereotypes. Today’s millennials actually admit they love their parents and list them as friends on Facebook. They have no strong desire to leave home. They’re not even skewed liberal. This new generation is also questioning consumerism more than ever before, and they’ve proven to have very little brand loyalty. Most importantly, they’re currently defining what is real, cool, and interesting. That’s why listening is crucial.

3. Keep It Real


Today’s millennials are not just good at figuring out what’s authentic, they can also spot what is inauthentic from a mile away. Having grown up in the Internet age, they expect brands to talk to them with a real voice, and they’re not afraid to engage them in a public forum. One great example of authenticity in action is a program recently run by airline KLM. KLM kicked off their social media program by asking, “What do we know to be true about how people interact with our brand?” The conclusion: people waste a lot of time in airports.
Starting with that simple truth, KLM set their campaign up for authentic direct-to-consumer engagement. They decided to surprise passengers that mentioned their KLM flight via Twitter or Foursquare. The teams used social media profiles to learn a little more about these travelers, enabling them to respond with appropriate perks such as a travel book for the hopelessly lost or a sports watch for the casual runner. These random acts of kindness took a little more effort than generic communications, but the response was rewarding. Travelers were only too happy to share their KLM experiences online with others. And let’s face it, what’s more authentic than consumers speaking on behalf of your brand? So don’t be afraid to change your message to suit your audience’s real needs and desires. Then reap the rewards.

4. Follow This Guiding Principle


Given the speed of social media, your message can go from trusted to falling out of favor in the blink of an eye, and it could all hinge on what you say next. That’s why the number one thing you can do to ensure authenticity and trust when connecting with fans, customers, and partners is to think about what your message means to them.

‘People You May Know’ Feature Updates by LinkedIn

 
LinkedIn has tweaked its People You May Know feature with a streamlined look and more accurate recommendations, the company announced Tuesday.
The update, announced on LinkedIn’s blog, has also made it easier to filter results by company or school. To do so, you merely click on a logo to narrow the recommendations. Such search filters have been around since 2010, but the old interface was based on a checklist on the left-hand side of the page. LinkedIn is rolling out the enhanced feature over the next few weeks, but users can click on this link to access it now.
Another new feature is an “endless scroll” — a la Tumblr — that presents your recommendations in a seamless two-column flow. (The list may not actually be endless right now, but the goal is to make it very long.) As is the current trend, the new site is redesigned to be more photo-heavy, like Pinterest and Facebook Timeline. The pictures on the new page are not only bigger, but they run in two columns vs. the previous single column.
For comparison’s sake, here’s the old version:

And here’s the new version:

What do you think of the new look? Have you tried the new version? Does it yield better results? Let us know in the comments.

Monday 26 March 2012

Flashy HTML5 Website Without Coding or Plug-Ins by SagarGanatra

Wix.com HTML5 Template 

Feast your eyes on the future of the Internet — beautiful websites built with HTML5. The newest version of HTML effectively catapults words and graphics into another dimension without plug-ins or the annoying lag time. Wix.com is making sure everyone — not just developers and fancy web designers — can get in on the action.
HTML5 is the updated version of the online code used to build websites. The newer version of this code allows websites to integrate multimedia — videos, pictures, graphics and words (that not stagnate) — into its mainframe. CSS3 is the markup language that programmers can lay on top of the HTML to make websites even more visually appealing (think: accessories to make websites extra fancy).
Recent examples of the magic of HTML5 include two interactive music experiences. Arcade Fire’s The Wilderness Downtown and OK Go x Pilobulos’ All Is Not Lost. Both were built with the Google Chrome team to showcase the advanced web technologies allowing people to see a new virtual world.
Wix.com says there’s no need to be a world-class web designer to use HTML5. The company unveiled a free HTML5 website builder with plenty of easy-to-use templates on Monday. The six-year-old company already has over 20 million free and premium users building flash websites using the myriad of DIY templates.
“With the HTML5 launch Wix users will have an even greater freedom to create ultra-modern and user-friendly websites that best cater to their needs,” Omer Shai, VP of marketing at Wix, told SRG

Wix built the new series of templates for people with small businesses, designers, photographers and corporations that want to take their web presence to the next level. There’s absolutely no need for code. Individuals can simply drag and drop different website features and type in words where needed.

HTML5 features will optimize integrating video, open up font/typography options, make galleries more optimal for viewing and introduce an element of interactivity. Best of all, HTML5-based websites are supposed by most new devices.
This all means the web experience will be faster, cleaner and make galleries and videos more fluid. Social media and search optimization are also improved features of these new templates.
“HTML5 provides new technological capabilities and solutions for products that don’t support Flash,” Shai said. “The majority of browsers support HTML5 now and it’s market share is growing very quickly, the popularity of mobile web browsing is on a constant rise and HTML5 is compatible across the web.”
Wix.com HTML5 editor pages
With Wix’s HTML5 builder individuals can build small business web pages (see here) and personal portfolios (like this one).
Have you considered exploring HTML5 options for your business or personal portfolio? Tell us in the comment what you think about these new templates.

Google Says Google+ Enhanced Ads Are Up to 10% More Effective




As Facebook has proved, the social graph can be a valuable marketing tool. Google’s new social network, it seems, is no exception — the company says ads incorporating Google+ social data have seen an uptick in engagement.
Google Vice President for Engineering Vic Gundotra told the New York Times Tuesday that advertisements on Google sites with “social annotations,” such as thumbnails that indicates someone you’re connected to once clicked a +1 button on an ad, have experienced a 5% to 10% increase in click-through rates.
‘We have been in this business for a long time,” Gundotra said, “and there are very few things that give you a 5 to 10 percent increase on ad engagement.”
This sort of social recommendation is a proven boon to online advertising. After Facebook introduced new features to Sponsored Stories, which highlight Friends’ connections with marketers on each other’s profiles, Nielsen tracked 79 marketing campaigns over six months in order to determine the new format’s effect compared to ads on the platform that don’t include such information.
Ads that told users their friends had liked or interacted with a brand page saw a 55% rise in ad recall.

Gundotra pointed out to the Times one advantage Google has over Facebook in the social advertising arena. Google’s ads, socially annotated or otherwise, are delivered to users when they search for something directly.
What do I do when I’m looking to buy sunglasses? I Google “sunglasses.” That’s a great time to hit me with a sunglasses ad.
Meanwhile, on Facebook, such messages are delivered to me without this information about my intentions. Facebook knows what I like in general, but it would have a hard time pinpointing the exact moment at which I’m in the market for a new pair of shades.
But Google’s 5% to 10% uptick, while impressive, is not the biggest we’ve ever seen. When Facebook announced its “sponsored stories” feature, one study found the format had a 46% higher click-through rate than other ads offered by the site. Granted, the site’s click-through rate was never relatively stellar, but it makes sense that its strategy of implicit social recommendations immediately paid off: It has more than 500 million users who, in the U.S. at least, spend an average of 8 hours per month on its site.
Google+, meanwhile, has yet to prove that it has taken off as a social network. On Tuesday, the company revealed that 50 million people with Google+ profiles use “Google-Plus enhanced products” such as YouTube and Google Search. But that doesn’t say anything about how many people are spending time on the social network itself.
The company does, evidently, have enough active users of its social features to cause a bump in ad engagement. But when users say they spend an average of 3.3 minutes on Google+ itself in the month of January compared to 7.5 hours on Facebook, as they did in a recent Comscore report, it seems there’s potential for a much greater increase.

Most Popular Visited viewed Websites list by SagarGanatra

The following list of the Most Popular Websites was updated on Monday, March 26th 2012...
1.Google.comwww.google.com
2.Facebook.comwww.facebook.com
3.Youtube.comwww.youtube.com
4.Yahoo.comwww.yahoo.com
5.Baidu.comwww.baidu.com
6.Wikipedia.orgwww.wikipedia.org
7.Live.comwww.live.com
8.
Blogspot.comwww.blogspot.com
9.Qq.comwww.qq.com
10.Twitter.comwww.twitter.com
11.Amazon.comwww.amazon.com
12.Linkedin.comwww.linkedin.com
13.Google.co.inwww.google.co.in
14.Taobao.comwww.taobao.com
15.Yahoo.co.jpwww.yahoo.co.jp
16.Sina.com.cnwww.sina.com.cn
17.Msn.comwww.msn.com
18.Wordpress.comwww.wordpress.com
19.Google.com.hkwww.google.com.hk
20.Google.dewww.google.de
21.Ebay.comwww.ebay.com
22.Google.co.jpwww.google.co.jp
23.Yandex.ruwww.yandex.ru
24.Google.co.ukwww.google.co.uk
25.Weibo.comwww.weibo.com
26.Google.frwww.google.fr
27.163.comwww.163.com
28.Bing.comwww.bing.com
29.
Googleusercontent.comwww.googleusercontent.com
30.
T.cowww.t.co
31.
Microsoft.comwww.microsoft.com
32.Apple.comwww.apple.com
33.Mail.ruwww.mail.ru
34.Google.com.brwww.google.com.br
35.Paypal.comwww.paypal.com
36.Soso.comwww.soso.com
37.Google.itwww.google.it
38.Tumblr.comwww.tumblr.com
39.Google.eswww.google.es
40.Google.ruwww.google.ru
41.Vk.comwww.vk.com
42.Imdb.comwww.imdb.com
43.Sohu.comwww.sohu.com
44.Pinterest.comwww.pinterest.com
45.Craigslist.orgwww.craigslist.org
46.Blogger.comwww.blogger.com
47.Babylon.comwww.babylon.com
48.
Go.comwww.go.com
49.Fc2.comwww.fc2.com
50.Flickr.comwww.flickr.com
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